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Three essays on macroeconomic consequences of stock market volatility

Posted on:2010-01-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Harvard UniversityCandidate:Mertens, Thomas MichaelFull Text:PDF
GTID:1449390002984327Subject:Economics
Abstract/Summary:
Stock prices are very volatile. Their fundamental value as measured by the ex-post realized net present value of dividends fluctuates far less than the stock price itself. A hot debate about the efficiency of stock markets has arisen from this observation. Many researchers attribute at least some of this "excess volatility" we observe in stock prices to inefficient actions of economic agents.;This dissertation is about the macroeconomic consequences of excess volatility in stock prices. It demonstrates that this volatility can lead to large reductions in welfare for households and discusses ways for governmental intervention to alleviate adverse effects. The dissertation furthermore shows that large stock market volatility can arise from tiny, in fact arbitrarily small, errors in agents' actions or in their belief formation.;The first chapter shows that high volatility in stock prices that is not justified by their underlying fundamentals can drastically reduce welfare. The channel is present even if there is an observed disconnect between the stock market and real investment in the economy. Stock market participants gain relative to workers despite the fact that they are responsible for generating excess volatility.;The second chapter provides a novel solution method for solving models of heterogeneous expectations in nonlinear setups. It is built on perturbation methods with a nonlinear change of variables. The chapter reviews the corresponding mathematical foundations necessary for determining the applicability of the solution method. This solution method permits the study of models of volatility with dispersed information.;The third chapter incorporates excess volatility in stock prices into a standard general equilibrium model. A government can implement stock price stabilizing policies which are shown to lead to drastic welfare gains. No superior information is necessary on the part of the government. Stock prices not only aggregate information about fundamentals which is dispersed in the economy but also display excess volatility due to arbitrarily small correlated distortions of beliefs on the part of households.
Keywords/Search Tags:Stock, Volatility
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