Behavioural Finance

Behavioural financeexamines investor behaviour to understand how people make decisions, individually and collectively. Behavioural finance does not assume that people consider all available information in decision-making and act rationally by maximising utility within budget constraints and updating expectations consistent with Bayes’ formula. The resulting behaviours may affect what is observed in the financial markets. Loss…

Details

Other Anomalies, Implications of Market Pricing Anomalies

A number of additional anomalies has been documented in the financial markets, including the existence of Closed-End Investment Fund Discounts A closed-end investment fund issues a fixed number of shares at inception and does not sell any additional shares after the initial offering. Therefore, the fund capitalisation is fixed unless a secondary public offering is…

Details

Implications of the Efficient Market Hypothesis

The implications of efficient markets to investment managers and analysts are important because they affect the value of securities and how these securities are managed. Several implications can be drawn from the evidence on efficient markets for developed markets: Fundamental Analysis Fundamental analysis is the examiniation of publicly available information and the formulaiton of forecasts…

Details

Indexes for Alternative Investments

Three of the most widely followed alternative investment classes are commodities, real estate, and hedge funds. Commodity Indexes Commodity indexes consist of futures contracts on one or more commodities, such as agricultural products (rice, wheat, sugar), livestock (cattle, hogs), precious and common metals (gold, silver, copper), and energy commodities (crude oil, natural gas). Real Estate…

Details