The financial consequences of behavioural biases : an analysis of bias in corporate finance and financial planning

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Bibliographic Information

The financial consequences of behavioural biases : an analysis of bias in corporate finance and financial planning

Imad A. Moosa, Vikash Ramiah

(Palgrave pivot)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2017

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book provides a concise analysis of behavioural biases and their implications for financial decision making. The book is written in the normative tradition, arguing strongly for the superiority of behavioural finance with respect to explaining observed phenomena in financial markets. It offers some unique features, including a discussion of the issue of conspiracy theory and how behavioural biases lead to belief in conspiracy theories. Lingering belief in the principles of neoclassical finance is attributed in part to the doctrine of publish or perish, which dominates contemporary academia. The offshoots of behavioural finance are discussed in detail, including ecological finance, environmental finance, social finance, experimental finance, neurofinance, and emotional finance. A comprehensive discussion of narcissism is presented where it is demonstrated that narcissistic behaviour is prevalent in the finance industry and that it led to the eruption of the global financial crisis.

Table of Contents

1. The Rise and Fall of Neoclassical Finance2. The Rise and Rise of Behavioural Finance3. Overconfidence and Self-Serving Bias4. Loss Aversion Bias, the Disposition Effect and Representativeness Bias5. Other Biases in the Behavioural Finance Literature6. Recent Developments7. Epilogue

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