Merton's Problem with Recursive Perturbed Utility
Min Dai, Yuchao Dong, Yanwei Jia, and Xun Yu Zhou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a recursive perturbed utility model for dynamic investment decisions, incorporating an entropy-based preference for randomization, leading to explicit Gaussian optimal policies and quantifying the cost of randomness in portfolio choices.
Contribution
It develops a novel recursive utility framework that models stochastic decision-making and derives explicit Gaussian optimal portfolios in incomplete markets.
Findings
Optimal portfolio variance inversely related to risk aversion and volatility
Optimal mean policy deviates from classical Merton policy at first order
Relative wealth loss due to randomization is of higher order
Abstract
The classical Merton investment problem predicts deterministic, state-dependent portfolio rules; however, laboratory and field evidence suggests that individuals often prefer randomized decisions leading to stochastic and noisy choices. Fudenberg et al. (2015) develop the additive perturbed utility theory to explain the preference for randomization in the static setting, which, however, becomes ill-posed or intractable in the dynamic setting. We introduce the recursive perturbed utility (RPU), a special stochastic differential utility that incorporates an entropy-based preference for randomization into a recursive aggregator. RPU endogenizes the intertemporal trade-off between utilities from randomization and bequest via a discounting term dependent on past accumulated randomization, thereby avoiding excessive randomization and yielding a well-posed problem. In a general Markovian…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRisk and Portfolio Optimization · Stochastic processes and financial applications · Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics
