eScholarship Repository eScholarship Repository California Digital Library
eScholarship > IBER > FINANCE > Paper RPF-294

Finance Papers

Finance Website

Policies

Search Finance

Submit a Paper

Notify me of new papers

institute_logo

Institute of Business and Economic Research
Research Program in Finance Working Papers
University of California, Berkeley

Finance Papers  •  Finance Website  •  Policies  •  Search  •  Submit a Paper

Rational Markets: Yes or No? The Affirmative Case
Mark Rubinstein, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley

Download the Paper (171 K, PDF file) - June 1, 2000 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
This paper presents the logic behind the increasingly neglected proposition that prices set in developed financial markets are determined as if all investors are rational. It contends that realistically, market rationality needs to be defined so as to allow investors to be uncertain about the characteristics of other investors in the market. It also argues that investor irrationality, to the extent it affects prices, is particularly likely to be manifest through overconfidence, which in turn is likely to make the market in an important sense too efficient, rather than less efficient, in reflecting information. To illustrate, the paper ends by re-examining some of the most serious evidence against market rationality: excess volatility, the risk premium puzzle, the size anomaly, calendar effects and the 1987 stock market crash

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Mark Rubinstein, "Rational Markets: Yes or No? The Affirmative Case" (June 1, 2000). Research Program in Finance Working Papers. Paper RPF-294.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iber/finance/RPF-294

 
bar
Open Archives Initiative eScholarship is a service of the California Digital Library bepress