Claus Munk
Professor
About
Departments
Department of Finance
Room: SOL/A5.13
Finance
Financial institutions
Savings
Pensions
Securities
Qualitative methods
Primary research areas
Pensions and retirement savings
How much should households save for retirement? How should pension plans be designed in terms of contribution rate, investment strategy, and payout policy?
Consumption and investments over the lifecycle
How should individuals (or households) optimally consume and invest in different phases of their life? How do the answers depend on the wealth, income, and risk attitudes of the individual? How are exchange-traded funds and other financial products designed so that they best serve the needs of individual investors?
I aim to help households and individual investors in making good financial decisions
My research and teaching focus on:
The financial decisions of households and individuals over the lifecycle, such as how much and when to save for retirement, how to invest the savings, how to choose the best mortgage, etc.
How and why individuals’ real-life financial decisions deviate from the theoretically optimal decisions
How pension schemes and financial instruments are designed to best serve household-level investors
How securities are priced in financial markets, e.g., why stocks generally offer substantially higher returns on average than bonds.
Publications
See all publicationsMarch 2024
How Do Interest-only Mortgages Affect Consumption and Saving over the Life Cycle?
Go to publication2023
Hvad gør Danmarks pensionssystem til en af verdens bedste?
Nøglen er finansiel bæredygtighed
Go to publicationRecent research projects
Portfolio choice with ETFs: Pitfalls and Progress
Portfolio theory prescribes that investors combine a riskfree asset with a portfolio of all risky assets. Stock market index ETFs appear to be an excellent instrument to implement such a strategy. However, we identify and quantify four problems with the way stock market index ETF are constructed. But we also suggest improvements to the design of such ETFs. (With Tom Ernst and Holger Kraft)
Working paper at SSRN
Optimal retirement saving and dissaving
We evaluate various retirement saving plans for a range of characteristics of the individual saver. Almost all individuals prefer a target-date fund investment strategy and benefit substantially from annuitization. Furthermore, most individuals prefer expected payouts to increase through retirement instead of the flat payouts of typical annuity plans.
Working paper at SSRN
Asset pricing with clustered, controllable disasters
Large declines in aggregate consumption often occur as a sequence of smaller drops over several years. When a drop is observed in one period, the risk of another drop in the next period goes up. By adding a tractable version of such self-exciting consumption disasters to a mainstream asset pricing model, we can better match the observed equity premium and other asset pricing moments. We also introduce the possibility of controlling the magnitude or the probability of disasters through costly interventions. (With Carina Fleischer, Holger Kraft, and Farina Weiss)
Working paper at SSRN
Links
Personal website
For download of Claus Munk’s working papers
SSRN author page
I am the Study Director of this excellent program
Outside activities
PhD course teacher and organizer, Graduate School of Finance, Finland , 2005 -
Occasional consulting for Forsikring & Pension , 2017 -
Occasional consulting for Forsikring & Pension (Insurance & Pension Denmark) and Rådet for Afkastforventninger (Council for Return Expectations)