Oeffentliche Finanz

Ratingagenturen behandelten Griechenland willkürlich : Interview mit Nicos Chilas

Ratingagenturen : Gespräch mit Detlef Budig

Rating-Agenturen: Katalysatoren der Baisse : Interview mit Klaus Ammann

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s Echo der Zeit vom Mittwoch, 25.7.2012, 18.00 Uhr
Rating-Agenturen: Katalysatoren der Baisse

Schwache Staaten gerieten aufgrund schlechter Ratings in eine Abwärtsspirale, die nichts mit der realwirtschaftlichen Situation zu tun habe, sagen Forscher der Universität St. Gallen.

Rating-Agenturen gaukeln Wissen vor

Radiogiornale : Intervistato da Alessandra Felicioni

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Dopo minuti 18:30.

R. Dornbusch: Exchange Rates and Inflation

R. B. McKenzie and G. Tullock: homo oeconomicus - ökonomische Dimensionen des Allltags

Problem des Ratingoligopols

Predicting the Presidential Election Cycle in US Stock Prices: Guinea Pigs versus the Pros

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The notion that US stock prices follow a pattern that is synchronized with the rhythm of presidential elections has been a topic among financial investors for a long time. Academic work exists that supports this idea, quantifies the pattern, and has demonstrated its robustness over several decades and across parties in power. This paper takes the existence and robustness of this presidential election cycle for granted and asks whether individuals exploit it when asked to predict stock prices. It considers and contrasts two types of such forecasts: Those made by professionals included in the Livingston survey; and those made by students in a laboratory experiment. One key result is that neither group fares particularly well, though participants in the lab experiment clearly outperformed the professionals.

[http://ideas.repec.org/p/usg/dp2008/2008-06.html Volltext herunterladen]

Predicting the Election Cycle in US Stock Prices : Guinea Pigs versus the Pros

Description: 

The notion that US stock prices follow a pattern that is synchronized with the rhythm of presidential elections has been a topic among financial investors for a long time. Academic work exists that supports this idea, quantifies the pattern, and has demonstrated its robustness over several decades and across parties in power. This paper takes the existence and robustness of this presidential election cycle for granted and asks whether individuals exploit it when asked to predict stock prices. It considers and contrasts two types of such forecasts: Those made by professionals included in the Livingston survey; and those made by students in a laboratory experiment. One key result is that neither group fares particularly well, though participants in the lab experiment clearly outperformed the professionals
[This is a shortened version of my 2008 discussion paper with the same title]

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