We study an agent's lifecycle portfolio choice problem with stochastic labor income, borrowing constraints and a finite retirement date. Similarly to Biffis et al. (2020), wages evolve in a path-dependent way, but the presence of a finite retirement time leads to a novel, two-stage infinite dimensional stochastic optimal control problem with explicit optimal controls in feedback form. We find an explicit solution to the associated Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman (HJB) equation, which is an infinite dimensional PDE of parabolic type. The identification of the optimal feedbacks is delicate due to the presence of time-dependent state constraints, which appear to be new in the infinite dimensional stochastic control literature. The explicit solution allows us to study the properties of optimal strategies and discuss their implications for portfolio choice. As opposed to models with Markovian dynamics, path dependency can now modulate the hedging demand arising from the implicit holding of risky assets in human capital, leading to richer asset allocation predictions consistent with wage rigidity and the agents learning about their earning potential.

Wage rigidity and retirement in optimal portfolio choice

Zanella M.
2025-01-01

Abstract

We study an agent's lifecycle portfolio choice problem with stochastic labor income, borrowing constraints and a finite retirement date. Similarly to Biffis et al. (2020), wages evolve in a path-dependent way, but the presence of a finite retirement time leads to a novel, two-stage infinite dimensional stochastic optimal control problem with explicit optimal controls in feedback form. We find an explicit solution to the associated Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman (HJB) equation, which is an infinite dimensional PDE of parabolic type. The identification of the optimal feedbacks is delicate due to the presence of time-dependent state constraints, which appear to be new in the infinite dimensional stochastic control literature. The explicit solution allows us to study the properties of optimal strategies and discuss their implications for portfolio choice. As opposed to models with Markovian dynamics, path dependency can now modulate the hedging demand arising from the implicit holding of risky assets in human capital, leading to richer asset allocation predictions consistent with wage rigidity and the agents learning about their earning potential.
2025
Merton problem
Second order parabolic Hamilton–Jacobi–Bellman equations in infinite dimension
Stochastic delayed differential equations
Time-dependent constraints
Wage rigidity
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1292157
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