STOCKHOLM — Three American professors won the Nobel prize for economics Monday for shedding light on how stock, bond and house prices move over time— work that's changed how people around the world invest.
Two of the winners — Eugene Fama, 74, and Lars Peter Hansen, 60 — teach at the University of Chicago. The third, Robert Shiller, 67, is a professor at Yale University and is well-known as a creator of the well-known Case-Shiller index of home prices.
Hansen received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Minnesota in 1978 after receiving a B.S. in math from Utah State University.
On hearing the news, University of Minnesota President Eric Kaler issued a statement saying that Hansen's Nobel prize "recognizes his groundbreaking work, and it confirms the exceptional strength of a University of Minnesota education."
Shiller, a professor at Yale University, began his career at the University of Minnesota as an assistant professor from 1972-74.
The three economists were honored for separate research that collectively expanded the understanding of asset prices.
Beginning in the 1960s, Fama showed that prices change so quickly and efficiently to reflect new information that investors can't outperform markets in the short term. This was a breakthrough that helped popularize index funds, which invest in broad market categories instead of trying to pick individual winners.
Two decades later, Shiller reached a separate conclusion: That over the long run, markets can often be irrational, subject to booms and busts and the whims of human behavior. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences noted that the two men's findings "might seem both surprising and contradictory."