Impact of Presentation Format and Self-Reported Risk Aversion on Revealed Skewness Preferences

Vrecko Dennis, Klos Alexander, Langer Thomas

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

This paper reports the results of an experiment on the revealed preference for skewness in a comparison of continuous return distributions. We find that revealed preferences are highly sensitive to the way asset risks are communicated. Whereas probability density functions lead to a pronounced preference for left-skewed distributions, the opposite is true for cumulative distribution functions. Systematic misperceptions of the variance cannot explain the sensitivity of preferences to the presentation format. Part of the preference for positive skewness when risks are communicated through probability density functions is due to a systematic misestimation of the expected return. We also find that self-reported risk aversion, a measure of risk attitude commonly used in practice, is a valuable predictor of skewness preferences. Individuals that judge themselves as more risk averse show a stronger preference for right skewness.

Details about the publication

JournalDecision Analysis
Volume6
Issue2
Page range57-74
StatusPublished
Release year2009 (30/06/2009)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Keywordsdecision analysis skewness preferences presentation formats self-reported risk aversion investment perception decisions prices choice

Authors from the University of Münster

Klos, Alexander
FB04 - School of Business and Economics (FB04)
Langer, Thomas
Chair of Finance
Vrecko, Dennis
Chair of Finance