1. Introduction
When an agent’s marginal utility depends positively on the past consumption of other agents, but not on her own past consumption, she is said to exhibit
external habit persistence.
1 These models have received much attention recently—due to their success in asset pricing—against the grim backdrop of the poor performance of earlier consumption-based models. Specifically,
Campbell and Cochrane (
1999,
2000), using a representative-agent model in which consumption and habit enter as a difference in the period utility function (henceforth the difference model), generate a large, volatile, and state-dependent equity premium from a smooth aggregate consumption process—an achievement that has eluded earlier models of consumption-based asset pricing.
2 In spite of such success as a description of the
representative agent in asset pricing, the difference model, we argue, is unlikely to describe the preferences of
individual investors.
As emphasized by
Campbell and Cochrane (
1999,
2000), the fact that own consumption and the external habit benchmark enter as a difference is important, for it is this feature in their model that generates a time-varying risk aversion, and the associating attractive features for asset pricing.
3 Ironically, the fact that own consumption and external habit entering as a difference is also the culprit behind an extreme degree of conformity in individual portfolio choice required by the model. To see this point, note first that own consumption has to be bounded below by habit when an investor exhibits habit persistence of the difference form, or marginal utility will be undefined. In order for an investor to maintain her own consumption above the external habit benchmark, she has to hold
every non-redundant asset contained in the benchmark.
To illustrate the bite of this portfolio restriction at a practical level, consider a common specification in which an investor uses (a moving average of) past US aggregate consumption as her external habit benchmark. For this investor to avoid having consumption fall below habit, she has to hold all individual stocks from all markets represented in US aggregate wealth. For example, if the US aggregate wealth portfolio contains a positive position in Samsung, and Samsung’s stocks are non-redundant, then an investor with US aggregate consumption as her external habit benchmark will also have to hold Samsung’s stocks—it is not enough for the investor to just participate in the stock market or hold the shares of some other Korean companies. One may argue that US aggregate consumption may not be the most reasonable benchmark to use even for US investors. Indeed, an investor’s main concern may be her position relative to people with whom she has regular contact, such as her colleagues or neighbors. For concreteness, consider an investor who uses her colleagues’ average consumption as her benchmark. Our results imply that such an investor needs to hold non-zero positions in all (non-redundant) individual stocks from all markets held by any of her colleagues. In particular, it only takes one of her colleagues to hold some shares in Air New Zealand for her to be required to do the same. Failure for the investor to hold the airline’s stocks implies that her consumption will fall below habit in some states, making her marginal utility undefined.
It appears highly unrealistic that even for a narrowly-defined community (such as within the same company or neighborhood), every member in the community will hold all individual stocks from all markets held by any other member of the community. Yet, this is the only way to ensure internal consistency between an investor’s external habit benchmark and her portfolio choice when the investor exhibits external habit persistence of the difference form. For this reason, we argue that the difference model of external habit is unlikely to describe the preferences of individual investors.
We are not claiming that peer effects in portfolio choice are unimportant. To be sure,
Duflo and Saez (
2002) demonstrate the presence of peer influence among employees of a large university, both in their decision to participate in Tax Deferred Accounts, and in their choice of mutual fund vendor.
Hong et al. (
2004), using US survey data, show that social households are more likely to participate in the stock market, and the effect of sociability are stronger in US states where stock market participation rates are higher.
DeMarzo et al. (
2004) demonstrate that peer effects can also help explain the home bias puzzle in international portfolio choice.
Rather than trying to show that peer effects are absent, what we emphasize here is that if individuals within a community behave according to the difference model of external habit—a specification considered desirable in the existing literature—an extreme degree of conformity will result. We show that our conclusion obtains as long as some general conditions are met, and no specific functional form describing how the external habit benchmark X depends on aggregate consumption has to be assumed. Specifications of X found in the existing literature can be broadly classified into two categories: one that depends only on past aggregate consumption, and one that depends on both current and past aggregate consumption. We show that our conclusion is robust to both categories of
The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. In
Section 2, we present the difference model of external habit. In
Section 3, we derive the model’s extreme prediction regarding investors’ participation decisions with respect to different securities. We first consider external habit benchmarks that depend only on past aggregate consumption, followed by benchmarks that depend on both current and past aggregate consumption. When security returns following a lognormal process, we show that both forms of external habit implies an extreme degree of portfolio conformity. For an investor who uses US aggregate consumption as her external habit benchmark, she has to hold
all non-redundant securities contained in the US aggregate wealth portfolio. Otherwise, she risks having her consumption fall below habit, making her utility undefined.
Section 4 examines further implications of the theoretical results derived in
Section 3. Even for an investor who uses the average consumption of a more narrowly-defined community as her benchmark, she is still required to hold non-zero positions in all (non-redundant) individual stocks held by any other member of the community. When markets are incomplete, even if an individual investor holds a financial portfolio that conforms perfectly with that associated with the external habit benchmark, it is still impossible for her to ensure that consumption exceeds habit in all states of the world.
Section 5 offers some concluding remarks.
2. The Difference Model of External Habit
We consider a habit persistence utility function of the following form:
Each investor maximizes the expected utility of the current and all future periods given by
where
is the level of own consumption,
the level of external habit,
the subjective discount factor, and
the utility curvature parameter. The coefficient of relative risk aversion (
) implied by this utility function is no longer constant. Defining the surplus consumption ratio
as
,
is time-varying and related to the surplus consumption ratio as
Thus, in bad states when consumption is low relative to habit,
increases. This in turn leads to a higher price of risk and higher expected returns in bad states.
Because
and
enter as a difference, this specification is often termed a difference model—to distinguish it from ratio models, in which
and
enter as a ratio. Habit is
external, in the sense that it depends only on aggregate national consumption, but not on the investor’s own consumption. In
Section 4.1, we will also consider an alternative notion of external habit, where an investor is concerned with her relative standing in a more narrowly-defined community, such as her workplace or her neighborhood.
As emphasized by
Campbell and Cochrane (
1999,
2000), the fact that
and
enter as a difference in Equation (
1) is important—for it is this feature in their model that gives rise to a time-varying risk aversion, and a volatile and state-dependent equity premium.
Santos and Veronesi (
2010) show that the time-varying risk aversion feature of the Campbell–Cochrane model is important in explaining the cross section of stock returns.
Chue (
2005) shows that this feature can generate time-varying international stock market comovement. More recently,
Pflueger and Rinaldi (
2022) show that time-varying risk aversion magnifies the effects of monetary policy.
Yet, it is also clear from Equation (
1) that since
and
enter as a difference,
has to lie above
, or marginal utility becomes undefined. In particular, if Equation (
1) describes the preferences of an individual investor, she has to make explicit consumption and portfolio decisions in order to keep her own consumption
from falling below
In this study, we examine what these decisions are, and whether they are reasonable.
4Specifications of external habit
found in the extant literature can be broadly classified into two categories: specifications that we term
predetermined habit, in which
depends
only on past aggregate consumption (
…); and specifications that we term
concurrent habit, in which
depends on
both current and past aggregate consumption (
…), such that the determination of
and
is concurrent.
5 Our goal here is not to show that one of these two specifications of external habit is superior, but rather, to demonstrate the robustness of our results to both types of habit.
3. Implications for Portfolio Choice
In this section, after defining the structure of asset returns, we will examine the restrictions imposed by the difference model of external habit on individual portfolio choice. We will study both the predetermined and the concurrent habit specifications.
3.1. Asset Returns
Suppose there are
N risky and 1 riskless securities. Denoting
as the gross simple return (including dividends) of security
i from time
t to
, and
as the gross simple return on the riskless asset, we assume that
R is constant over time, and the conditional distributions of the risky returns are jointly lognormal with time-varying conditional first and second moments
that depend on time
t information:
We rule out redundant assets, so the variance–covariance matrix
is full rank. The intertemporal budget constraint of an investor with period
t wealth
(before
takes place) can be written as
where
represents the fraction of the investor’s invested wealth (
) allocated to risky asset
A similar budget constraint also holds at the aggregate level.
3.2. Predetermined Habit
We refer to the stock of habit as predetermined when it is a function of past aggregate consumption only. Representing as and assuming that is differentiable in with and when we can derive a tight relationship between the aggregate portfolio and an individual investor’s portfolio
Proposition 1. Consider an investor who maximizes expected utility given by Equation (2), with the stock of external habit defined as a function of past aggregate consumption only. Representing as and assuming that the aggregate consumption–wealth ratio with , and that is differentiable in with and when then the investor will hold a positive position in security i if the aggregate portfolio contains a positive position in security i. Proof. The form of the utility function in Equation (
2) implies that the condition
has to be maintained for all dates
t. Since
this further implies that
has to be maintained for all
t. Consider time period
: Since
is a function of past aggregate consumption only,
can be maintained for
all states provided that at least
is invested in the riskless asset at time
This requires that
Since this requirement applies to any time period
s,
has to be maintained for all dates
The remainder of the proof establishes by contradiction that, if the aggregate portfolio
contains a positive position in security
an investor who maximizes expected utility given by Equation (
2) has to hold a positive position in security
i as well. Suppose the aggregate portfolio contains a positive position in security
i at time
(i.e.,
but the investor’s own portfolio does not (i.e.,
). The fact that asset returns are jointly lognormal, and security
i is non-redundant imply that for any finite positive constant
there is a positive probability for
and
, for all
Thus,
but
implies that
can exceed any finite constant with a positive probability. Together with the fact that
and
is differentiable and strictly increasing in
, there is a positive probability for
This contradicts the requirement established above that
has to be maintained for all
□
This proposition shows that, in order to keep her own consumption above the external habit benchmark for all states, an investor has to hold all non-redundant securities contained in the benchmark. Intuitively, when returns are lognormal, there is always a nonzero probability for the return on a particular security to exceed those on all other assets by an arbitrarily large (but finite) amount. Thus, when the benchmark portfolio contains asset i but an individual portfolio does not, there will be states of the world in which the return on asset i is so high that the individual investor is no longer able to keep up with the benchmark.
When habit is predetermined (i.e., depends only on past aggregate consumption), although a high aggregate consumption will not affect immediately, it will raise To ensure that can exceed for all states, an investor then has to place enough wealth in the riskless asset at time t when takes place. But since is a function of (which in turn depends on the return on the aggregate portfolio), how much riskless asset has to be held by the investor depends on the returns on the securities held in the aggregate portfolio. It is this dependence that motivates the individual investor to conform to the holdings of the aggregate portfolio.
A common form of predetermined habit is that considered by
Constantinides (
1990), in which
is expressed as a geometrically-weighted, moving average of past aggregate consumption:
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The parameter
a measures the persistence of habit, while
b controls the importance of habit relative to current consumption. Both
a and
b are assumed to lie between 0 and 1. It is easy to verify that this specification is a special case of the general class of predetermined habit considered above, and Proposition 1 applies.
3.3. Concurrent Habit
In this subsection, we show that when habit is concurrent so that is a function of both past and current aggregate consumption, the relationship between and derived above for predetermined habit still obtains. In fact, the proof is even simpler: When habit is concurrent, aggregate consumption has an immediate effect on so the intermediate step of investing in the riskless asset (as described in the previous subsection) can be omitted. Specifically, to make sure that exceeds (which depends on the contemporaneous aggregate consumption ), an investor has to hold all securities that are contained in the aggregate portfolio. Failure to do so implies that there is a nonzero probability for the investor’s wealth to fall below aggregate wealth by an arbitrarily large amount, and a high enough can raise above making the condition impossible to satisfy.
Proposition 2. Consider an investor who maximizes expected utility given by Equation (2), with the stock of external habit defined as a function of both current and past aggregate consumption. Representing as and assuming that the aggregate consumption-wealth ratio with , and that is differentiable in with and when then the investor will hold a positive position in security i if the aggregate portfolio contains a positive position in security i. Proof. The investor’s need to ensure
and the fact that
imply that
has to be maintained for all dates
t. As in the proof to Proposition 1 above, the remainder of this proof establishes by contradiction that if the aggregate portfolio
contains a positive position in security
an investor who maximizes expected utility given by Equation (
2) has to hold a positive position in security
i as well. Suppose the aggregate portfolio contains a positive position in security
i at time
but the investor’s own portfolio does not (
). The fact that asset returns are jointly lognormal, and security
i is non-redundant imply that for any finite positive constant
there is a positive probability for
and
, for all
Thus,
but
implies that
can exceed any finite constant with a positive probability. Together with the fact that
and
is differentiable and strictly increasing in
, there is a positive probability for
This contradicts the requirement established above that
has to be maintained for all
t. □
As discussed in
Campbell and Cochrane (
1999), habit
in their model is predetermined only when the surplus consumption ratio
is at its steady state. Everywhere else in the state space,
is concurrent, and
Campbell and Cochrane (
1999) show that
in these cases.
7 For parameter values considered by the authors, both
and
are positive, so
implies that
These parameter values also imply that
so that by writing
as
we can see that
when
Thus, Proposition 2 applies to every point in the state space of the Campbell–Cochrane model—except when the surplus consumption ratio is
exactly at its steady state.
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