Abstract
AbstractWe study cautious stochastic choice (CSC) agents facing optimal timing decisions in a dynamic setting. In an expected utility setting, the optimal strategy is always a threshold strategy—to stop/sell the first time the price process exits an interval. In contrast, we show that in the CSC setting, where the agent has a family of utility functions and is concerned with the worst case certainty equivalent, the optimal strategy may be of non-threshold form and may involve randomization. We provide some carefully constructed examples, including one where we can solve explicitly for the optimal stopping rule and show it is a non-trivial mixture of threshold strategies. Our model is consistent with recent experimental evidence in dynamic setups whereby individuals do not play cut-off or threshold strategies.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Cited by
2 articles.
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