Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility

Excessive risk-taking of financial agents drew a lot of attention in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Low interest rates and subdued market volatility during the Great Moderation are sometimes blamed for stimulating risk-taking and leading to the recent financial crisis. In recent years, wi...

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Main Author: Volha Audzei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Finance and Administration 2015-12-01
Series:ACTA VŠFS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://is.vsfs.cz/auth/repo/5133/AUDZEI.pdf
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spelling doaj-1d23f2a4927442b09e88aa69f5f124812020-11-24T22:15:45ZengUniversity of Finance and AdministrationACTA VŠFS1802-792X1802-79462015-12-0192115135Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market VolatilityVolha Audzei0CERGE-EIExcessive risk-taking of financial agents drew a lot of attention in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Low interest rates and subdued market volatility during the Great Moderation are sometimes blamed for stimulating risk-taking and leading to the recent financial crisis. In recent years, with many central banks around the world conducting the policy of low interest rates and mitigating market risks, it has been debatable whether this policy contributes to the building up of another credit boom. This paper addresses this issue by focusing on information acquisition by the financial agents. We build a theoretical model which captures excessive risk taking in response to changes in policy rate and market volatility. This excessive risk takes the form of an increased risk appetite of the agents, but also of decreased incentives to acquire information about risky assets. As a result, with market risk being reduced, agents tend to acquire more risk in their portfolios then they would with the higher market risk. The same forces increase portfolio risk when the safe interest rate is falling. The robustness of the results is considered with different learning rules.https://is.vsfs.cz/auth/repo/5133/AUDZEI.pdfRational InattentionInterest RatesFinancial CrisisRisk-taking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Volha Audzei
spellingShingle Volha Audzei
Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility
ACTA VŠFS
Rational Inattention
Interest Rates
Financial Crisis
Risk-taking
author_facet Volha Audzei
author_sort Volha Audzei
title Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility
title_short Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility
title_full Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility
title_fullStr Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility
title_full_unstemmed Information Acquisition and Excessive Risk: Impact of Policy Rate and Market Volatility
title_sort information acquisition and excessive risk: impact of policy rate and market volatility
publisher University of Finance and Administration
series ACTA VŠFS
issn 1802-792X
1802-7946
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Excessive risk-taking of financial agents drew a lot of attention in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Low interest rates and subdued market volatility during the Great Moderation are sometimes blamed for stimulating risk-taking and leading to the recent financial crisis. In recent years, with many central banks around the world conducting the policy of low interest rates and mitigating market risks, it has been debatable whether this policy contributes to the building up of another credit boom. This paper addresses this issue by focusing on information acquisition by the financial agents. We build a theoretical model which captures excessive risk taking in response to changes in policy rate and market volatility. This excessive risk takes the form of an increased risk appetite of the agents, but also of decreased incentives to acquire information about risky assets. As a result, with market risk being reduced, agents tend to acquire more risk in their portfolios then they would with the higher market risk. The same forces increase portfolio risk when the safe interest rate is falling. The robustness of the results is considered with different learning rules.
topic Rational Inattention
Interest Rates
Financial Crisis
Risk-taking
url https://is.vsfs.cz/auth/repo/5133/AUDZEI.pdf
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