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E-raamat: Physiology of Emotional and Irrational Investing: Causes and Solutions [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(University of Greenwich Business School, UK)
  • Formaat: 164 pages, 12 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, black and white; 14 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315269368
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 72,00 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 102,86 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 164 pages, 12 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, black and white; 14 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Feb-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315269368
The financial markets are a rollercoaster and this book follows the same theme the seduction of money, our ruinous, heady and high stakes pursuit of it, the incredible fortunes and calamitous losses that have been made in its name, the new and significant threat of retail (armchair) investors wanting their piece of the pie, and the perpetual and foolish mismatch that has always existed and will always exist between our evolutionary programming and the design of the financial markets.

The dominant theme that runs throughout the book ('Working out Wall Street') is actually a play on words, and relates both to the need to work out why Wall Street traders act so irrationally (e.g. using behavioural finance and evolutionary design to explain herding and panic selling), and the need to use physiological and sport science-related approaches to explain why working out (i.e. adopting exercise and diet-related practices usually applied to athletes) can significantly counter these behaviours. The phrase 'animal spirits' utilised in the concluding chapter title ('Taming Animal Spirits') refers to the seminal work of John Maynard Keynes in his 1936 classic work The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money and the idea that human emotions-animal spirits- remain a significant driver in (irrational and emotional) investing.

The rationale for this book is clear; behavioural finance and neurofinance have opened the floodgates in terms of recognising the role of emotional investing in cyclical boom-and-bust scenarios but what is still missing is an answer to the question So what do we do about it? This book seeks, in as compelling and entertaining a fashion as possible, to provide that answer.
List of figures
x
Acknowledgements xi
1 Introduction
1(36)
Working out Wall Street: taming animal spirits
1(1)
Working out Wall Street: structure of the book
2(7)
Brief introductions
9(5)
A Brief Guide to Trading
9(1)
A Brief Guide to the Brain
10(3)
A Brief Guide to Investor Emotions
13(1)
Homo biologicus
14(2)
Predicting market sentiment
16(1)
Lunch is for wimps
17(3)
Allostatic load
20(4)
Trader physiology: key takeaways
24(1)
Special feature: money, seduction, profit and panic
25(6)
Special feature: the modern James Bond
31(6)
2 Money --- a love story
37(30)
Money --- a love story
38(1)
The seduction of money
38(2)
Money: the `desire of desire'
40(1)
Addicted to trading?
40(2)
`If you're in trouble, double'
42(1)
Trading high
42(1)
Thrill junkies or risk takers?
43(1)
Animal spirits
44(9)
The winner effect
46(1)
House money effect
47(1)
Androgenic priming
47(1)
The anticipatory effect/challenge effect
47(1)
The framing effect
48(1)
The charisma/gatekeeper effect
49(1)
Anchoring and cognitive dissonance
49(1)
Bias
50(1)
Representativeness and availability' heuristic
50(1)
Over-optimism
51(1)
Belief perseverance
51(1)
Herding and cognitive dissonance
51(2)
Excitation transfer
53(1)
Churning and overtrading
53(1)
Hot money
53(1)
A Golden Age of Ignorance?
54(1)
A Glitch in the Matrix
55(1)
From Wall Street to Washington
56(1)
Is behavioural finance horseshit?
57(1)
Trader physiology: key takeaways
57(1)
Special feature: `The common denominator for fraud is opportunity'
58(6)
Special feature: breaking news
64(3)
3 Trading long or short on stress?
67(31)
Testosterone: the alpha hormone
69(1)
Alpha fraudsters and susceptible followers
70(1)
Big men, big lies
70(1)
Testosterone: the face of fraud?
71(1)
The warrior gene
72(1)
Nature or nurture?
73(1)
The dangers of dopamine
74(1)
Hardwired for success?
74(1)
Known unknowns
75(1)
Early warning systems
76(1)
The (often) uninformed retail investor: exploding ETFs
76(2)
From active to passive
78(1)
ETFs vs. human nature
78(2)
A Pressure to Conform
80(1)
Higher earners ... higher pressure?
80(1)
Stocks and suicides
81(1)
Embracing hedonism
82(1)
Weakened resistance
83(1)
`I have to race the race'
84(1)
Addicted to stress
85(1)
High stress, low control
86(1)
Workaholics and adrenaline junkies
87(1)
Trader physiology: key takeaways
87(1)
Special feature: hazing --- from sports to stocks
87(4)
Special feature: lunch isn't for wimps
91(7)
4 Taming animal spirits
98(33)
Nature vs. the markets
98(2)
Circannual hormonal fluctuations
100(1)
Loans and lunar cycles
101(1)
Trader physiology: key optimisation strategies
102(19)
#1 Traders and investors: born to run
103(3)
#2 Anabolic arbitrage: lift heavy to trade smart
106(2)
#3 Working out makes you smarter
108(2)
#4 Hedge your exposure to stress and go long on sleep
110(3)
#5 Hungry for success? Eat right to trade and invest better
113(2)
#6 Use music as a performance tool
115(1)
#7 Harness the power of nature
116(1)
#8 We are hardwired to herd
117(1)
#9 Embrace hedonism
118(1)
#10 Willpower is finite; use it wisely
119(2)
Trader physiology: key takeaways
121(1)
Special feature: maturity, mindfulness and the management of exuberance
121(5)
Special feature: anabolic arbitrage
126(5)
Glossary 131(4)
References 135(22)
Index 157
Elesa Zehndorfer is a Research Associate at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, Research Officer for British Mensa & Quora Top Writer 2017.