Description

Book Synopsis
An in-depth look into the various aspects of behavioral finance

Behavioral finance applies systematic analysis to ideas that have long floated around the world of trading and investing. Yet it is important to realize that we are still at a very early stage of research into this discipline and have much to learn. That is why Edwin Burton has written Behavioral Finance: Understanding the Social, Cognitive, and Economic Debates.

Engaging and informative, this timely guide contains valuable insights into various issues surrounding behavioral finance. Topics addressed include noise trader theory and models, research into psychological behavior pioneered by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, and serial correlation patterns in stock price data. Along the way, Burton shares his own views on behavioral finance in order to shed some much-needed light on the subject.

  • Discusses the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) and its history, and presents the background o

    Table of Contents

    Preface xi

    Introduction 1

    Part One Introduction to Behavioral Finance

    Chapter 1 What Is the Efficient Market Hypothesis? 5

    Information and the Efficient Market Hypothesis 6

    Random Walk, the Martingale Hypothesis, and the EMH 8

    False Evidence against the EMH 11

    What Does It Mean to Disagree with the EMH? 13

    Chapter 2 The EMH and the “Market Model” 15

    Risk and Return—the Simplest View 15

    The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) 18

    So What Is the Market Model? 23

    Chapter 3 The Forerunners to Behavioral Finance 25

    The Folklore of Wall Street Traders 26

    The Birth of Value Investing: Graham and Dodd 28

    Financial News in a World of Ubiquitous Television and Internet 29

    Part Two Noise Traders

    Chapter 4 Noise Traders and the Law of One Price 33

    The Law of One Price and the Case of Fungibility 33

    Noise 38

    Chapter 5 The Shleifer Model of Noise Trading 43

    The Key Components of the Shleifer Model 44

    Results 49

    Why the Shleifer Model Is Important 50

    Resolving the Limits to Arbitrage Dispute 51

    Chapter 6 Noise Trading Feedback Models 53

    The Hirshleifer Model 53

    The Subrahmanyam-Titman Model 58

    Conclusion 62

    Chapter 7 Noise Traders as Technical Traders 65

    Technical Traders as Noise Traders 67

    Herd Instinct Models 72

    Conclusion 76

    Part III Anomalies

    Chapter 8 The Rational Man 81

    Consumer Choice with Certainty 81

    Consumer Choice with Uncertainty 84

    The Allais Paradox 90

    Conclusion 92

    Chapter 9 Prospect Theory 93

    The Reference Point 93

    The S-Curve 94

    Loss Aversion 96

    Prospect Theory in Practice 98

    Drawbacks of Prospect Theory 98

    Conclusion 100

    Chapter 10 Perception Biases 101

    Saliency 101

    Framing 103

    Anchoring 106

    Sunk Cost Bias 108

    Conclusion 109

    Chapter 11 Inertial Effects 111

    Endowment Effect 111

    Status Quo Effect 116

    Disposition Effect 119

    Conclusion 120

    Chapter 12 Causality and Statistics 123

    Representativeness 123

    Conjunction Fallacy 127

    Reading into Randomness 129

    Small Sample Bias 131

    Probability Neglect 133

    Conclusion 134

    Chapter 13 Illusions 135

    Illusion of Talent 135

    Illusion of Skill 138

    Illusion of Superiority 139

    Illusion of Validity 141

    Conclusion 142

    Part IV Serial Correlation

    Chapter 14 Predictability of Stock Prices: Fama-French Leads the Way 147

    Testing the Capital Asset Pricing Model 147

    A Plug for Value Investing 149

    Mean Reversion—The DeBondt-Thaler Research 151

    Why Fama-French Is a Milestone for Behavioral Finance 152

    Chapter 15 Fama-French and Mean Reversion: Which Is It? 155

    The Month of January 155

    Is This Just About Price? 157

    The Overreaction Theme 157

    Lakonishok, Shleifer, and Vishny on Value versus Growth 158

    Is Overreaction Nothing More Than a “Small Stock” Effect? 159

    Daniel and Titman on Unpriced Risk in Fama and French 164

    Summing Up the Contrarian Debate 165

    Chapter 16 Short Term Momentum 167

    Price and Earnings Momentum 167

    Earnings Momentum—Ball and Brown 168

    Measuring Earnings Surprises 170

    Why Does It Matter Whether Momentum Is Price or Earnings Based? 173

    Hedge Funds and Momentum Strategies 174

    Pricing and Earnings Momentum—Are They Real and Do They Matter? 174

    Chapter 17 Calendar Effects 177

    January Effects 178

    The Other January Effect 180

    The Weekend Effect 181

    Preholiday Effects 182

    Sullivan, Timmermann, and White 183

    Conclusion 184

    Part V Other Topics

    Chapter 18 The Equity Premium Puzzle 187

    Mehra and Prescott 187

    What About Loss Aversion? 190

    Could This Be Survivor Bias? 191

    Other Explanations 192

    Are Equities Always the Best Portfolio for the Long Run? 193

    Is the Equity Premium Resolved? 194

    Chapter 19 Liquidity 195

    A Securities Market Is a Bid-Ask Market 196

    Measuring Liquidity 197

    Is Liquidity a Priced Risk for Common Stocks? 199

    Significance of Liquidity Research 200

    Chapter 20 Neuroeconomics 201

    Capuchin Monkeys 201

    Innateness Versus Culture 203

    Decisions Are Made by the Brain 203

    Decisions versus Outcomes 205

    Neuroeconomic Modeling 206

    More Complicated Models of Brain Activity 208

    The Kagan Critique 208

    Conclusion 209

    Chapter 21 Experimental Economics 211

    Bubble Experiments 212

    Endowment Effect and Status Quo Bias 215

    Calendar Effects 216

    Conclusion 216

    Conclusion And the Winner Is? 217

    The Semi-Strong Hypothesis—Prices Accurately Summarize All Known Public Information 217

    Can Prices Change if Information Doesn’t Change? 219

    Is the Law of One Price Valid? 220

    Three Research Agendas 221

    The Critics Hold the High Ground 223

    What Have We Learned? 223

    Where Do We Go From Here? (What Have We Not Learned?) 227

    A Final Thought 230

    Index 231

Behavioral Finance

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    A Hardback by Edwin T. Burton, Sunit N. Shah

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Behavioral Finance by Edwin T. Burton

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 26/04/2013
      ISBN13: 9781118300190, 978-1118300190
      ISBN10: 111830019X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An in-depth look into the various aspects of behavioral finance

      Behavioral finance applies systematic analysis to ideas that have long floated around the world of trading and investing. Yet it is important to realize that we are still at a very early stage of research into this discipline and have much to learn. That is why Edwin Burton has written Behavioral Finance: Understanding the Social, Cognitive, and Economic Debates.

      Engaging and informative, this timely guide contains valuable insights into various issues surrounding behavioral finance. Topics addressed include noise trader theory and models, research into psychological behavior pioneered by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, and serial correlation patterns in stock price data. Along the way, Burton shares his own views on behavioral finance in order to shed some much-needed light on the subject.

      • Discusses the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) and its history, and presents the background o

        Table of Contents

        Preface xi

        Introduction 1

        Part One Introduction to Behavioral Finance

        Chapter 1 What Is the Efficient Market Hypothesis? 5

        Information and the Efficient Market Hypothesis 6

        Random Walk, the Martingale Hypothesis, and the EMH 8

        False Evidence against the EMH 11

        What Does It Mean to Disagree with the EMH? 13

        Chapter 2 The EMH and the “Market Model” 15

        Risk and Return—the Simplest View 15

        The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) 18

        So What Is the Market Model? 23

        Chapter 3 The Forerunners to Behavioral Finance 25

        The Folklore of Wall Street Traders 26

        The Birth of Value Investing: Graham and Dodd 28

        Financial News in a World of Ubiquitous Television and Internet 29

        Part Two Noise Traders

        Chapter 4 Noise Traders and the Law of One Price 33

        The Law of One Price and the Case of Fungibility 33

        Noise 38

        Chapter 5 The Shleifer Model of Noise Trading 43

        The Key Components of the Shleifer Model 44

        Results 49

        Why the Shleifer Model Is Important 50

        Resolving the Limits to Arbitrage Dispute 51

        Chapter 6 Noise Trading Feedback Models 53

        The Hirshleifer Model 53

        The Subrahmanyam-Titman Model 58

        Conclusion 62

        Chapter 7 Noise Traders as Technical Traders 65

        Technical Traders as Noise Traders 67

        Herd Instinct Models 72

        Conclusion 76

        Part III Anomalies

        Chapter 8 The Rational Man 81

        Consumer Choice with Certainty 81

        Consumer Choice with Uncertainty 84

        The Allais Paradox 90

        Conclusion 92

        Chapter 9 Prospect Theory 93

        The Reference Point 93

        The S-Curve 94

        Loss Aversion 96

        Prospect Theory in Practice 98

        Drawbacks of Prospect Theory 98

        Conclusion 100

        Chapter 10 Perception Biases 101

        Saliency 101

        Framing 103

        Anchoring 106

        Sunk Cost Bias 108

        Conclusion 109

        Chapter 11 Inertial Effects 111

        Endowment Effect 111

        Status Quo Effect 116

        Disposition Effect 119

        Conclusion 120

        Chapter 12 Causality and Statistics 123

        Representativeness 123

        Conjunction Fallacy 127

        Reading into Randomness 129

        Small Sample Bias 131

        Probability Neglect 133

        Conclusion 134

        Chapter 13 Illusions 135

        Illusion of Talent 135

        Illusion of Skill 138

        Illusion of Superiority 139

        Illusion of Validity 141

        Conclusion 142

        Part IV Serial Correlation

        Chapter 14 Predictability of Stock Prices: Fama-French Leads the Way 147

        Testing the Capital Asset Pricing Model 147

        A Plug for Value Investing 149

        Mean Reversion—The DeBondt-Thaler Research 151

        Why Fama-French Is a Milestone for Behavioral Finance 152

        Chapter 15 Fama-French and Mean Reversion: Which Is It? 155

        The Month of January 155

        Is This Just About Price? 157

        The Overreaction Theme 157

        Lakonishok, Shleifer, and Vishny on Value versus Growth 158

        Is Overreaction Nothing More Than a “Small Stock” Effect? 159

        Daniel and Titman on Unpriced Risk in Fama and French 164

        Summing Up the Contrarian Debate 165

        Chapter 16 Short Term Momentum 167

        Price and Earnings Momentum 167

        Earnings Momentum—Ball and Brown 168

        Measuring Earnings Surprises 170

        Why Does It Matter Whether Momentum Is Price or Earnings Based? 173

        Hedge Funds and Momentum Strategies 174

        Pricing and Earnings Momentum—Are They Real and Do They Matter? 174

        Chapter 17 Calendar Effects 177

        January Effects 178

        The Other January Effect 180

        The Weekend Effect 181

        Preholiday Effects 182

        Sullivan, Timmermann, and White 183

        Conclusion 184

        Part V Other Topics

        Chapter 18 The Equity Premium Puzzle 187

        Mehra and Prescott 187

        What About Loss Aversion? 190

        Could This Be Survivor Bias? 191

        Other Explanations 192

        Are Equities Always the Best Portfolio for the Long Run? 193

        Is the Equity Premium Resolved? 194

        Chapter 19 Liquidity 195

        A Securities Market Is a Bid-Ask Market 196

        Measuring Liquidity 197

        Is Liquidity a Priced Risk for Common Stocks? 199

        Significance of Liquidity Research 200

        Chapter 20 Neuroeconomics 201

        Capuchin Monkeys 201

        Innateness Versus Culture 203

        Decisions Are Made by the Brain 203

        Decisions versus Outcomes 205

        Neuroeconomic Modeling 206

        More Complicated Models of Brain Activity 208

        The Kagan Critique 208

        Conclusion 209

        Chapter 21 Experimental Economics 211

        Bubble Experiments 212

        Endowment Effect and Status Quo Bias 215

        Calendar Effects 216

        Conclusion 216

        Conclusion And the Winner Is? 217

        The Semi-Strong Hypothesis—Prices Accurately Summarize All Known Public Information 217

        Can Prices Change if Information Doesn’t Change? 219

        Is the Law of One Price Valid? 220

        Three Research Agendas 221

        The Critics Hold the High Ground 223

        What Have We Learned? 223

        Where Do We Go From Here? (What Have We Not Learned?) 227

        A Final Thought 230

        Index 231

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