The Strategy of Professional Forecasting
- 22 October 2001
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper develops and compares two theories of strategic behavior of professional forecasters. The first theory posits that forecasters compete in a forecasting contest with pre-specified rules. In equilibrium of a winner-take-all contest, forecasts are excessively differentiated. According to the alternative reputational cheap talk theory, forecasters aim at convincing the market that they are well informed. The market evaluates their forecasting talent on the basis of the forecasts and the realized state. If the market has naive views on forecasters' behavior, forecasts are biased toward the prior mean. Otherwise, equilibrium forecasts are unbiased but imprecise.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Career Concerns of Mutual Fund ManagersThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1999
- Why Are Professional Forecasters Biased? Agency versus Behavioral ExplanationsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1996
- A Theory of Fads, Fashion, Custom, and Cultural Change as Informational CascadesJournal of Political Economy, 1992
- A Simple Model of Herd BehaviorThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1992
- Conservatism and consensus‐seeking among economic forecastersJournal of Forecasting, 1992
- The Effect of Professional Advice on the Stability of a Speculative MarketJournal of Political Economy, 1985
- Delegated portfolio managementJournal of Economic Theory, 1985
- Strategic Information TransmissionEconometrica, 1982
- A Bayesian Approach to the Linear Combination of ForecastsOperational Research Quarterly (1970-1977), 1975
- The Combination of ForecastsOR, 1969