
handle: 10419/56364 , 11585/875806 , 2451/27332
AbstractThis paper investigates the pricing effects of financial innovation in an economy with endogenous participation and heterogeneous income risks. The introduction of non-redundant assets endogenously modifies the participation set, reduces the covariance between dividends and participants' consumption and thus leads to lower risk premia. In multisector economies, financial innovation spreads across markets through the diversified portfolio of new entrants, and has rich effects on the cross-section of expected returns. The price changes can also lead some investors to leave the markets and give rise to non-degenerate forms of participation turnover. The model is consistent with several features of financial markets over the past few decades: substantial innovation, higher participation, significant turnover in investor composition, improved risk management practices, a slight increase in real interest rates, and a reduction in risk premia.
[SHS.GESTION.FIN] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration/domain_shs.gestion.fin, 330, incomplete markets, Market Participation, Incomplete Markets, Endogenous participation, Endogenous Participation, Risk Premium, Finanzinnovation, financial innovation, Spanning, Epstein-Zin Utility, Capital Asset Pricing Model, market participation; asset pricing; heterogeneity; financial innovation, G12, D52, Prinzipal-Agent-Theorie, spanning, multiple risk factors, ddc:330, Multiple Risk Factors, Financial Innovation, Asset Prices, Unvollständiger Vertrag, Endogenous Participation; Epstein-Zin Utility; Financial Innovation; Incomplete Markets; Multiple Risk Factors; Risk Premium; Spanning., E44, Epstein-Zin utility, Theorie, jel: jel:E44, jel: jel:D52, jel: jel:G12
[SHS.GESTION.FIN] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration/domain_shs.gestion.fin, 330, incomplete markets, Market Participation, Incomplete Markets, Endogenous participation, Endogenous Participation, Risk Premium, Finanzinnovation, financial innovation, Spanning, Epstein-Zin Utility, Capital Asset Pricing Model, market participation; asset pricing; heterogeneity; financial innovation, G12, D52, Prinzipal-Agent-Theorie, spanning, multiple risk factors, ddc:330, Multiple Risk Factors, Financial Innovation, Asset Prices, Unvollständiger Vertrag, Endogenous Participation; Epstein-Zin Utility; Financial Innovation; Incomplete Markets; Multiple Risk Factors; Risk Premium; Spanning., E44, Epstein-Zin utility, Theorie, jel: jel:E44, jel: jel:D52, jel: jel:G12
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