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MARKET FRICTIONS, SAVINGS BEHAVIOR, AND PORTFOLIO CHOICE
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1997
Year
EconomicsFinancial EconomicsAsset PricingAccountingManagementBusinessSavings BehaviorAsset AllocationHabit Persistence UtilityIntertemporal Portfolio ChoiceIncome RiskStock MarketFinancial EngineeringPortfolio AllocationInvestment StrategyFinancePortfolio Choice
We examine a decision theoretic model of portfolio choice in which investors face income risk that is not directly insurable. We consider the sensitivity of savings and portfolio allocation rules to different assumptions about utility, the stochastic process for income and asset returns, and market frictions (transactions costs and short-sale constraints). Under CRRA time additive utility, habit persistence utility, and for a broad range of parameterizations, the model predicts that investors wish to borrow and invest all of their savings in stocks. This qualitative implication is robust to the introduction of significant transaction costs in the stock market, and contrasts sharply with portfolio allocation models in which there is no labor income.