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This volume presents lecture notes for a course in behavioral
finance, most suitable for MBA students, but also adaptable for a
PhD class. These lecture notes are based on the author's experience
in teaching behavioral finance classes at Bocconi University (at
the PhD level) and at the Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yaffo
(MBA).Written in a way that is user-friendly for both teachers and
students, this book is the first of its kind and consolidates all
the material necessary for a course on behavioral finance,
balancing psychological concepts with financial applications.
Material formerly presented only in academic papers has been
transformed to a format more suitable for students, while the most
important issues have been highlighted in boxes that can form the
basis of a lecturer's teaching slides.In addition to corralling all
the currently scattered materials into one book, a neat logical
order is introduced to the subject matter. Behavioral finance is
put in a context relative to the other disciplines of finance, its
history is outlined and the way it evolved - from an eclectic
collection of counter examples to market efficiency into a bona
fide discipline of finance - is reviewed and explained.The 17
topic-based chapters in this book are each intended for a 90-minute
lecture. The first five chapters (Part 1) provide the psychological
and financial foundations of behavioral finance. The next 12
chapters (Part 2) are applications: Chapters 6-13 cover the
essentials while Chapters 14-17 are special, elective topics.
This volume presents lecture notes for a course in behavioral
finance, most suitable for MBA students, but also adaptable for a
PhD class. These lecture notes are based on the author's experience
in teaching behavioral finance classes at Bocconi University (at
the PhD level) and at the Academic College of Tel Aviv-Yaffo
(MBA).Written in a way that is user-friendly for both teachers and
students, this book is the first of its kind and consolidates all
the material necessary for a course on behavioral finance,
balancing psychological concepts with financial applications.
Material formerly presented only in academic papers has been
transformed to a format more suitable for students, while the most
important issues have been highlighted in boxes that can form the
basis of a lecturer's teaching slides.In addition to corralling all
the currently scattered materials into one book, a neat logical
order is introduced to the subject matter. Behavioral finance is
put in a context relative to the other disciplines of finance, its
history is outlined and the way it evolved - from an eclectic
collection of counter examples to market efficiency into a bona
fide discipline of finance - is reviewed and explained.The 17
topic-based chapters in this book are each intended for a 90-minute
lecture. The first five chapters (Part 1) provide the psychological
and financial foundations of behavioral finance. The next 12
chapters (Part 2) are applications: Chapters 6-13 cover the
essentials while Chapters 14-17 are special, elective topics.
Behavioral Finance: A Novel Approach presents original papers
exploring fresh ideas in behavioral finance. Its chapters span a
wide range of topics in a distinct mix of traditional issues along
with less conventional matters. This blend creates an optimal
balance between chapters aiming at widening the scope of research
in behavioral finance and those striving to refine the extant
knowledge.Thus, along with traditional topics such as biases in
pension decisions, analysts recommendation, gender differences in
decisions and IPO's underpricing, the book also contains chapters
on CEO and board members behavior, biased responses to regulation
and regulatory reform, investors' attitudes towards corporate
governance, cognitive biases in judicial decisions, the relations
between behavioral finance and religion, new methods to calibrate
the accuracy of forecasts, and the relations between behavioral
finance and optimal contracting.Presenting original findings on a
vast assortment of subjects, all in one venue, makes the book ideal
as a reference book for researchers and practitioners interested in
keeping up with the important developments in behavioral finance.
The book could also serve as a handy guide for adapting insights
from popular behavioral finance to some important underrepresented
issues.
This unique volume presents new original research exploring factors
that lead to investors behavioral biases. It discusses how features
such as professionalism, sophistication, gender, media, and culture
influence investors' decision-making in general, and in particular,
how they generate (or limit) behavioral and cognitive biases. The
effects of these factors on capital markets are also discussed. The
book is based on the discussions and presentations at the First
Israel Behavioral Finance Conference, which took place in Tel Aviv
in May 2015. It examines in greater detail some of the key issues
discussed at the conference.This is an innovative book in
behavioral finance: it is the first to present an extensive
collection of papers which discuss a comprehensive array of factors
that influence or define investor character and analyzes these
factors' effects on financial markets. The book is useful for
readers interested in understanding the factors that influence
investors' profiles and thus their behavioral biases. The book will
be of great interest to researchers and students seeking a
reference book which contains timely research on these areas of
behavioral finance.
The area of behavioral finance, though relatively young, has
matured and spread beyond its initial objectives: to demonstrate
the fallibility of the efficient market hypothesis, to shake the
belief in the ubiquity of rational decision making, and to convince
the finance world of the importance of psychological biases in
decision making. The success of the field in meeting its goals,
however, has called into question its continued relevance.
Behavioral finance is thus currently at a crossroads, and
researchers need to decide which way they should turn for the area
to continue to thrive and to meaningfully contribute to financial
knowledge.This collection of papers deals with rarely-explored
topics to point at new directions that behavioral finance should
explore to maintain its viability, along with contributions to
traditional topics. Some of these topics include innovations, the
psychology of policy-makers, biases of peer-to-peer market
participants, the behavior and motivation behind corporate social
responsibility, and the design of exchanges. Additionally,
well-known topics such as the disposition effect, slow and fast
decisions and the availability heuristic are revisited, and
surprising new findings are presented.By opening the field to novel
avenues of discussion, this book addresses the future of behavioral
finance and its transition into a new era.
Bridging the GAAP: Recent Advances in Finance and Accounting aims
to promote a stronger interface between researchers in accounting
and finance that will enhance the understanding of the similarities
and differences between these two fields. Such dialog will also
acquaint researchers in each area with significant recent advances
in the other area, and will enable a cross fertilization of
thoughts, from which both can significantly benefit. This
consolidates the efforts to bridge the gap between finance and
accounting by looking at diverse topics in accounting and finance
and providing interesting points of view on different topics. Most
of the chapters concentrate on the topic of fair value accounting
and on the question of the extent to which accounting reflects the
financial situation of a firm. The book combines new developments
in the area of theoretical finance and accounting, and the
convergence of these two approaches to better serve investors and
the general public.
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