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Reply: “Safety First – An Expected Utility Principle”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2009
Extract
We are grateful for the opportunity which Professors Gressis and Remaley's Comment [1] has afforded us to clarify our analysis of the relationship between Roy's Safety First principle and the Mean-Variance expected utility rule, which unfortunately they find misleading. In our original presentation we did not explicitly analyze situations in which Roy's criterion leads to an extreme corner solution; and G-R are perfectly correct in noting that if a riskless asset exists, a “Safety-Firster” will not invest in risky securities at all if the risk-free interest rate, r, exceeds the disaster level d. The reason for this is straightforward: such an investment strategy minimizes the risk of disaster. In fact in this particular instance the investor can reduce the probability of disaster to zero.
- Type
- Communications
- Information
- Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis , Volume 9 , Issue 6 , December 1974 , pp. 1063 - 1064
- Copyright
- Copyright © School of Business Administration, University of Washington 1974
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