Behavioral Finance: The Second Generation
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5.0 • 2개의 평가
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Behavioral finance presented in this book is the second-generation of behavioral finance. The first generation, starting in the early 1980s, largely accepted standard finance’s notion of people’s wants as “rational” wants—restricted to the utilitarian benefits of high returns and low risk. That first generation commonly described people as “irrational”—succumbing to cognitive and emotional errors and misled on their way to their rational wants. The second generation describes people as normal. It begins by acknowledging the full range of people’s normal wants and their benefits—utilitarian, expressive, and emotional—distinguishes normal wants from errors, and offers guidance on using shortcuts and avoiding errors on the way to satisfying normal wants. People’s normal wants include financial security, nurturing children and families, gaining high social status, and staying true to values. People’s normal wants, even more than their cognitive and emotional shortcuts and errors, underlie answers to important questions of finance, including saving and spending, portfolio construction, asset pricing, and market efficiency.
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Psychology and behavioral finance is playing a bigger role on the stage of finance, and perhaps will become the protagonist in the near future. Why? Meir Statman’s Behavioral Finance tried its best to offer a clear answer: because behavioral finance provide a better model for people’s financial activities in the real world better than the conventional financial model. Behavioral finance bridges the gap between finance and humanity. Participants in financial activities are human beings before they become financial beings, whether professionals or amateurs. Thus, financial activities will reflect human nature.