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Financial Market Bubbles and Crashes

Features, Causes, and Effects

Harold L. Vogel

PDF
ca. 64,19
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Springer International Publishing img Link Publisher

Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Volkswirtschaft

Beschreibung

Economists broadly define financial asset price bubbles as episodes in which prices rise with notable rapidity and depart from historically established asset valuation multiples and relationships. Financial economists have for decades attempted to study and interpret bubbles through the prisms of rational expectations, efficient markets, equilibrium, arbitrage, and capital asset pricing models, but they have not made much if any progress toward a consistent and reliable theory that explains how and why bubbles (and crashes) evolve and are defined, measured, and compared. This book develops a new and different approach that is based on the central notion that bubbles and crashes reflect urgent short-side rationing, which means that, as such extreme conditions unfold, considerations of quantities owned or not owned begin to displace considerations of price.


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Schlagwörter

econometric methods, central banks, financial asset price bubbles, Financial crisis, behavioral risk, Market bubbles, capital asset pricing models, efficient-market hypothesis, efficient markets, Financial asset bubble theory, Market crashes