Title: Module C2
1Module C2
- Decision Models
- Decision Making Under Risk
2Decision Making Under Risk
- When doing decision making under uncertainty, we
assumed we had no idea about which state of
nature would occur. - In decision making under risk, we assume we have
some idea (by experience, gut feel, experiments,
etc.) about the likelihood of each state of
nature occuring
3The Expected Value Approach
- Given a set of probabilities for the states of
nature, p1, p2 etc., for each decision an
expected payoff can be calculated by - ?pi(payoffi)
- If this is a decision that will be repeated over
and over again, the decision with the highest
expected payoff should be the one selected to
maximize total expected payoff. - But if this is a one-time decision, perhaps the
risk of losing much money may be too great --
thus the expected payoff is just another piece of
information to be considered by the decision
maker.
4Expected Value Decision for Tom Brown
- Suppose the broker has offered his own
projections for the probabilities of the states
of nature - P(S1) .2, P(S2) .3, P(S3) .3, P(S4) .1,
P(S5) .1
Expected Value
.2(-100).3(100).3(200).1(300).1(0)
100
.2(250).3(200).3(150) .1(-100).1(-150)
130
.2(500).3(250).3(100) .1(-200).1(-600)
125
.2(60).3(60).3(60) .1(60).1(60)
60
5Perfect Information
- Although the states of nature are assumed to
occur with the previous probabilities, suppose
you knew, each time which state of nature would
occur -- i.e. you had perfect information - Then when you knew S1 was going to occur, you
would make the best decision for S1 (Stock
500). This would happen p1 .2 of the time. - When you knew S2 was going to occur, you would
make the best decision for S2 (Stock 250).
This would happen p1 .3 of the time. - And so forth
6Expected Value of Perfect Information (EVPI)
- The expected value of perfect information (EVPI)
is the gain in value from knowing for sure which
state of nature will occur when, versus only
knowing the probabilities. - It is the upper bound on the value of any
additional information.
7Calculating the EVPI
Expected Return With Perfect Information (ERPI)
.2(500) .3(250) .3(200) .1(300) .1(60)
271
Expected Return With No Additional Information
EV(Bond) 130
Expected Value Of Perfect Information (EVPI)
ERPI - EV(Bond) 271 - 130 141
8Using the Decision Template
9Sample Information
- One never really has perfect information, but can
gather additional information, get expert advice,
etc. that can indicate which state of nature is
likely to occur each time. - The states of nature still occur, in the long run
with P(S1) .2, P(S2) .3, P(S3) .3, P(S4)
.1, P(S5) .1. - We need a strategy of what to do given each
possibility of the indicator information - We want to know the value of this sample
information (EVSI).
10Sample Information Approach
- Given the outcome of the sample information, we
revise the probabilities of the states of nature
occurring (using Bayesian analysis). - Then we repeat the expected value approach (using
these revised probabilities) to see which
decision is optimal given each possible value of
the sample information.
11Example -- Samuelman Forecast
- Noted economist Milton Samuelman gives an
economic forecast indicating either Positive or
Negative economic growth in the coming year. - Using a relative frequency approach based on past
data it has been observed - P(Positivelarge rise) .8 P(Negativelarge
rise) .2 - P(Positivesmall rise) .7 P(Negativesmall
rise) .3 - P(Positiveno change) .5 P(Negativeno
change) .5 - P(Positivesmall fall) .4 P(Negativesmall
fall) .6 - P(Positivelarge fall) 0 P(Negativelarge
fall) 1
12Bayesian ProbabilitiesGiven a Positive Forecast
Prob(Positive) P(Positive and Large Rise)
P(Positive and Small Rise) P(Positive
and No Change) P(Positive and Small Fall)
P(Positive and Large Fall)
Prob(Positive) P(PositiveLarge Rise)P(Large
Rise) P(PositiveSmall Rise) P(Small Rise)
P(PositiveNo Change)P(No Change)
P(PositiveSmall Fall) P(Small Fall)
P(PositiveLarge Fall) P(Large Fall)
(.80)
(.20)
(.70)
(.30)
(.50)
(.30)
(.40)
(.10)
(0)
.56
(.10)
P(Large RisePos) P(PosLg. Rise)P(Lg.
Rise)/P(Pos) P(Small RisePos) P(PosSm.
Rise)P(Sm. Rise)/P(Pos) P(No ChangePos)
P(PosNo Chg.)P(No Chg.)/P(Pos) P(Small FallPos)
P(PosSm. Fall)P(Sm. Fall)/P(Pos) P(Large
FallPos) P(PosLg. Fall)P(Lg. Fall)/P(Pos)
(.80) (.20) /.56 .286
(.70) (.30) /.56 .375
(.50) (.30) /.56 .268
(.40) (.10) /.56 .071
(0) (.10) /.56 0
13Best Decision With Positive Forecast
Expected Value
84
180
249
60
When Samuelman predicts positive -- Choose the
Stock!
14Bayesian ProbabilitiesGiven a Negative Forecast
Prob(Negative) P(Negative and Large Rise)
P(Negative and Small Rise) P(Negative
and No Change) P(Negative and Small Fall)
P(Negative and Large Fall)
Prob(Negative) P(NegativeLarge Rise)P(Large
Rise) P(NegativeSmall Rise) P(Small Rise)
P(NegativeNo Change)P(No Change)
P(NegativeSmall Fall) P(Small Fall)
P(NegativeLarge Fall) P(Large Fall)
(.20)
(.20)
(.30)
(.30)
(.50)
(.30)
(.60)
(.10)
(1)
.44
(.10)
P(Large RiseNeg) P(NegLg. Rise)P(Lg.
Rise)/P(Neg) P(Small RiseNeg) P(NegSm.
Rise)P(Sm. Rise)/P(Neg) P(No ChangeNeg)
P(NegNo Chg.)P(No Chg.)/P(Neg) P(Small FallNeg)
P(NegSm. Fall)P(Sm. Fall)/P(Neg) P(Large
FallNeg) P(NegLg. Fall)P(Lg. Fall)/P(Neg)
(.20) (.20) /.44 .091
(.30) (.30) /.44 .205
(.50) (.30) /.44 .341
(.60) (.10) /.44 .136
(1) (.10) /.44 .227
15Best Decision With Negative Forecast
Expected Value
120
67
-33
60
When Samuelman predicts negative -- Choose Gold!
16Strategy With Sample Information
- If the Samuelman Report is Positive --
- Choose the stock!
- If the Samuelman Report is Negative --
- Choose the gold!
17Expected Value of Sample Information (EVSI)
- Recall,
- P(Positive) .56 P(Negative) .44
- When positive -- choose Stock with EV 249
- When negative -- choose Gold with EV 120
Expected Return With Sample Information (ERSI)
.56(249) .44(120) 192.50
Expected Return With No Additional Information
EV(Bond) 130
Expected Value Of Sample Information (EVSI)
ERSI - EV(Bond) 192.50 - 130 62.50
18Efficiency
- Efficiency is a measure of the value of the
sample information as compared to the theoretical
perfect information. - It is a number between 0 and 1 given by
- Efficiency EVSI/EVPI
- For the Jones Investment Model
- Efficiency 62.50/141 .44
19Using the Decision Template
20Output -- Posterior Analysis
Indicator ProbabilitiesRevised
Probabilities Optimal Strategy EVSI, EVPI,
Efficiency
21Module C2 Review
- Expected Value Approach to Decision Making Under
Risk - EVPI
- Sample Information
- Bayesian Revision of Probabilities
- P(Indicator Information)
- Strategy
- EVSI
- Efficiency
- Use of Decision Template