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Journal of Financial Economics

Anxiety in the face of risk

Journal of Financial Economics
Volume Issue
Volume 121, Issue 2
Page range
Pages 414-426
Date published:
By:
Thomas M. Eisenbach
Published Article
Working paper version
Abstract

We model an anxious agent as one who is more risk averse with respect to imminent risks than with respect to distant risks. Based on a utility function that captures individual subjects’ behavior in experiments, we provide a tractable theory relaxing the restriction of constant risk aversion across horizons and show that it generates rich implications. We first apply the model to insurance markets and explain the high premia for short-horizon insurance. Then, we show that costly delegated portfolio management, investment advice, and withdrawal fees emerge as endogenous features and strategies to cope with dynamic inconsistency in intratemporal risk-return trade-offs.

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