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Finance and the behavioral prospect[...
Chen, James Ming.

 

  • Finance and the behavioral prospect[electronic resource] :risk, exuberance, and abnormal markets /
  • 紀錄類型: 書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
    杜威分類號: 332.6019
    書名/作者: Finance and the behavioral prospect : risk, exuberance, and abnormal markets // by James Ming Chen.
    作者: Chen, James Ming.
    出版者: Cham : : Springer International Publishing :, 2016.
    面頁冊數: xii, 343 p. : : ill., digital ;; 24 cm.
    Contained By: Springer eBooks
    標題: Investments - Psychological aspects.
    標題: Investments - Decision making.
    標題: Finance.
    標題: Risk Management.
    標題: Capital Markets.
    標題: Behavioral/Experimental Economics.
    ISBN: 9783319327112
    ISBN: 9783319327105
    內容註: 1 The Structure of a Behavioral Revolution -- 2 Mental Accounting, Emotional Hierarchies, and Behavioral Heuristics -- 3 Higher-Moment Capital Asset Pricing and Its Behavioral Implications -- 4 Tracking the Low-Volatility Anomaly Across Behavioral Space -- 5 The Intertemporal Capital Asset Pricing Model: Hedging Investment Risk Across Time -- 6 Risk Aversion -- 7 The Equity Risk Premium and the Equity Premium Puzzle -- 8 Prospect Theory -- 9 Specific Applications of Prospect Theory to Behavioral Finance -- 10 Beyond Hope and Fear: Behavioral Portfolio Theory -- 11 Behavioral Gaps Between Hypothetical Investment Returns and Actual Investor Returns -- 12 Irrational Exuberance: Momentum Crashes and Speculative Bubbles -- Conclusion: The Monster and the Sleeping Queen.
    摘要、提要註: This book explains how investor behavior, from mental accounting to the combustible interplay of hope and fear, affects financial economics. The transformation of portfolio theory begins with the identification of anomalies. Gaps in perception and behavioral departures from rationality spur momentum, irrational exuberance, and speculative bubbles. Behavioral accounting undermines the rational premises of mathematical finance. Assets and portfolios are imbued with "affect." Positive and negative emotions warp investment decisions. Whether hedging against intertemporal changes in their ability to bear risk or climbing a psychological hierarchy of needs, investors arrange their portfolios and financial affairs according to emotions and perceptions. Risk aversion and life-cycle theories of consumption provide possible solutions to the equity premium puzzle, an iconic financial mystery. Prospect theory has questioned the cogency of the efficient capital markets hypothesis. Behavioral portfolio theory arises from a psychological account of security, potential, and aspiration.
    電子資源: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32711-2
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