Publication | Closed Access
Grain Price Expectations of Illinois Farmers and Grain Merchandisers
81
Citations
12
References
1990
Year
Applied EconomicsBehavioral Decision MakingAgricultural EconomicsCommodity MarketGrain QualityGrain Price ExpectationsAsset PricingSubjective Price DistributionBehavioral FinanceExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisRisk AversionFood PolicyConsumer ChoiceExpectation FormationEconomicsFutures PriceMarketingFinanceAgricultural SystemBehavioral EconomicsBusinessCommodity Price IndexGrain Storage
Abstract The study's purpose is to measure the extent to which futures and option prices reflect the subjective price distribution of a subset of market participants, farmers, and grain merchandisers in Illinois. Findings suggest that in most instances the futures price is an appropriate proxy for expected price. However, volatilities implied by option premia usually overestimate the subjective variances of producers and merchandisers. These differences between individual and market expectations of variance are consistent with findings of overconfidence in the psychology literature and should be considered by analysts when making observations about hedging decisions and risk aversion.
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