Abstract: | I present a new approach to the dynamic portfolio and consumptionproblem of an investor who worries about model uncertainty (inaddition to market risk) and seeks robust decisions along thelines of Anderson, Hansen, and Sargent (2002). In accordancewith max-min expected utility, a robust investor insures againstsome endogenous worst case. I first show that robustness dramaticallydecreases the demand for equities and is observationally equivalentto recursive preferences when removing wealth effects. Unlikestandard recursive preferences, however, robustness leads toenvironment-specific "effective" risk aversion. As an extension,I present a closed-form solution for the portfolio problem ofa robust Duffie-Epstein-Zin investor. Finally, robustness increasesthe equilibrium equity premium and lowers the risk-free rate.Reasonable parameters generate a 4% to 6% equity premium. |