Financial Markets: Economics 252 Robert Shiller Introductory Lecture
Financial Markets: Economics 252 Robert Shiller Introductory Lecture
Moral Hazard
Example: burning down a house to collect on fire insurance Ubiquity of moral hazard problems Practical finance has developed institutions to promote risk management while dealing with moral hazard
Democratization of Finance
Trend over the centuries has been to apply financial and insurance principles to a broader and broader segment of population Advance of information technology
Text #1: Foundations of Financial Markets and Institutionsof 117 books, Frank J. Fabozzi, Author/Editor
publisher (Frank Fabozzi Associates), Adjunct Prof. Yale SOM Franco Modigliani, Prof. Of Economics and Finance Emeritus, MIT Frank J. Jones, Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America Michael G. Ferri. George Mason University Entire book assigned
Text #2 Stocks for the Long Run Jeremy Siegel, 1994, 1998, 2002
Book is best known for making the case for stocks as best long-term investment But in fact offers a wide view of empirical literature on financial markets
Origins of concept of probability Multiplication rule, law of large numbers is basis of risk management Examples of risk pooling in operation Review of basic statistical and associated economic concepts: Expected utility theory, variance, covariance regression analysis
Lecture 2: The Universal Principle of Risk Management: Pooling and Hedging of Risk
Private insurance institutions were invented after fire of London 1666 Role of discovery of probability theory in this invention The extension through time of insurance practice into increasingly more realms of human risk Modern insurance companies and their regulators
How risks are spread Covariance with market portfolio Beta Mutual fund theorem Investment companies and their management
Yield
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