We study the emergence of bubbles in a laboratory experiment with large groups of individuals. The realized price is the aggregation of the forecasts of a group of individuals, with positive expectations feedback through speculative demand. When prices deviate from fundamental value, a random selection of participants receives news about overvaluation. Our findings are: (i) large asset bubbles are robust in large groups, (ii) information contagion through news affects behaviour and may break the coordination on a bubble, (iii) time varying heterogeneity provides an explanation of bubble formation and crashes, and (iv) bubbles are strongly amplified by coordination on trend-extrapolation.
CITATION STYLE
Hommes, C., Kopányi-Peuker, A., & Sonnemans, J. (2021). Bubbles, crashes and information contagion in large-group asset market experiments. Experimental Economics, 24(2), 414–433. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10683-020-09664-w
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.