Behavioural Finance: A User's Guide 
asked by perfectstorm on November 1, 2006 4:34 PM
A concrete guide that links the theory of behavioral finance with applications in financial products
Behavioral finance is a rapidly expanding field, with major implications for the way in which the investment process is conducted. Behavioural Finance links the concepts of behavioral finance to measurable variables and smarter investment decision making. Comprehensive coverage relating theory to practical investment analysis provides a usable, practical guide for real-world situations.
Behavioral finance is a rapidly expanding field, with major implications for the way in which the investment process is conducted. Behavioural Finance links the concepts of behavioral finance to measurable variables and smarter investment decision making. Comprehensive coverage relating theory to practical investment analysis provides a usable, practical guide for real-world situations.
Reviews
This book is jammed packed with lots of information. I'm on my third read of it. It's hard to understand for a novice like myself, but with each subsequent read, I pick up more information. Plus, there's a lenghty bibliography where you can find references to more in-depth research.
For anyone who is a student of finance and wants practical, research proven information, this is the book for you!
For anyone who is a student of finance and wants practical, research proven information, this is the book for you!
reviewed by bigchad on November 25, 2006 1:33 PM
Perhaps it's the author's intent to make the book as concise but informative as possible that it became a highly concentrated dose of investment psychology and empirical stuff not easily digestable for rookies or even veterans without a strong academic background on finance. For example, he had covered in the 28 page first chapter, psychology theories (with source reference, and simple background/statistics info/support) including over-confidence, over-optimissim, cognitive dissonance, confirmation bias, conservatism bias, anchoring, representativeness heuristic, availability bias, ambiguity aversion, frame dependence/mental accounting, utility theory (dynamic) prospect theory etc. Do you get what I mean?
IMHO, this book can serve as a recap for advanced traders who understand well basic financial concepts including Efficient Market Hypothesis and it's offsprings like CAPM, and can read statistics and essays with ease. For novices, "Beyond Greed and Fear: Understanding Behavioral Finance and the Psychology of Investing" by Hersh Shefrin and "The psychology of Finance by Lars Tvede" should be better choices.
p.s. The conclusions in the end of each chapter are well written, I must add. However, I cant say there are significant correlation between individual chapters.
IMHO, this book can serve as a recap for advanced traders who understand well basic financial concepts including Efficient Market Hypothesis and it's offsprings like CAPM, and can read statistics and essays with ease. For novices, "Beyond Greed and Fear: Understanding Behavioral Finance and the Psychology of Investing" by Hersh Shefrin and "The psychology of Finance by Lars Tvede" should be better choices.
p.s. The conclusions in the end of each chapter are well written, I must add. However, I cant say there are significant correlation between individual chapters.
reviewed by jazzman on November 28, 2006 2:33 AM
