Freejaffacake
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- Feb 20, 2015
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Why do we assume in the UIRP that investors are risk neutral? can someone explain it please?
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In this carry trade example, he can get more than 8% when the borrowing currency appreciates against the investment currency, so the expected payoff here is practically unknown (nobody can predict exchange rates movements easily). However this investor could calculate a “expected return” with the info available he has that moment. He compares this expected return with other expected returns (which must be equal of the carry trade right?), but he decides to make a carry trade anyways. He is dreaming about that 22% profit he could get if the exchange rate appreciates 14% instead of 0% despite he could get a guaranteed 4.5% return on a AAA bond. This is risk neutral, isn’t it?Freejaffacake wrote:
A risk neutral party is indifferent between choices with equal expected payoffs even if one choice is riskier.
I cant see that this is the case here.