The Logarithmic Investor's Decision to Acquire Costly Information

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.21.4.383

This paper explores the relationship between the decision to purchase a costly information system and the wealth of an investor with a logarithmic utility function, where the information system may provide information concerning the payoffs from risky investments. It is shown, for the logarithmic investor, that (a) there is a wealth “break-even point” below which it is suboptimal to purchase an information system at a fixed cost, and (b) the amount the investor would be willing to pay for access to the information system is a linearly increasing function of his wealth.

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