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Article
The demand for risky assets under uncertain inflation: An examination of some widely used assumptions
Journal of Economics and Business (1987)
  • Keith Womer, University of Missouri-St. Louis
  • R. Stephen Cantrell
Abstract
This paper examines the effect of the following commonly used methods of incorporating random inflation into discrete-time models of the demand for risky assets: 1) the use of a multivariate normal probability distribution for nominal asset returns and the random inflation rate, and 2) the approximation of real asset returns by the difference between nominal returns and the rate of inflation. The combination of these assumptions results in a deceptively simple version of the inflationary capital asset pricing model (CAPM). However, in an approximation-free version of this model the expected value of real wealth does not exist. While it is obvious that mean-variance analysis is not applicable in such models, we also find that the model does not satisfy Ohlson's weakened conditions for a quadratic approximation to the portfolio selection problem. Furthermore, this model is neither a member of the generalized Pareto-Levy nor log-stable class of portfolio models analyzed by Fama, Samuelson, Ohlson, and Struck.
Disciplines
Publication Date
November, 1987
DOI
10.1016/0148-6195(87)90029-4
Citation Information
Keith Womer and R. Stephen Cantrell. "The demand for risky assets under uncertain inflation: An examination of some widely used assumptions" Journal of Economics and Business Vol. 39 Iss. 4 (1987) p. 357 - 362
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/keith-womer/56/