Abstract
We develop a model of information and portfolio choice in which ex ante identical investors choose to specialize because of fixed attention costs required in learning about securities. Without this friction, investors would invest in all securities and would be indifferent across a wide range of information choices. When securities’ dividends depend on an aggregate (macro) risk factor and idiosyncratic (micro) shocks, fixed attention costs lead investors to specialize in either macro or micro information. Our results favor Samuelson’s dictum that markets are more micro than macro efficient. We derive testable predictions from our model and find empirical support for our predictions in specialization by U.S. equity mutual funds.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Glasserman, P. (2023). Investor Information Choice with Macro and Micro Information. Review of Asset Pricing Studies, 13(1), 1–52. https://doi.org/10.1093/rapstu/raac009
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