9.5 hours on-demand video | Access on mobile and PC | Certificate of completion
Description
Behavioral Finance offers a revolutionary perspective on how investors make decisions, contrasting sharply with the traditional view of rational, utility-maximizing individuals. This course dives deep into the psychological factors and cognitive biases that influence financial behavior, showing how real-world decision-making often deviates from theoretical models. Through a structured exploration of key concepts like utility theory, market efficiency, and investor biases, students will gain the tools to understand and apply Behavioral Finance principles in various financial contexts. The course also addresses practical applications in portfolio construction, investment analysis, and client relations, bridging the gap between theory and practice.
What you'll learn
- Behavioral Finance Fundamentals: Understand the basics of Behavioral Finance, differentiating it from Traditional Finance.
- Utility and Bayes Theory: Explore utility theory, axioms, Bayes theory, and its application to economic decision-making.
- Rational Economic Decision-Making: Analyze the concept of rational economic decision-making and risk aversion among investors.
- Prospect Theory and Market Efficiency: Delve into prospect theory, efficient market hypothesis, market anomalies, and forms of market efficiency.
- Portfolio Construction: Gain insights into traditional perspectives of portfolio construction, consumption, and savings models.
- Behavioral Asset Pricing and Portfolio Theory: Study behavioral asset pricing models and behavioral portfolio theory.
- Cognitive and Emotional Biases: Identify and understand cognitive errors, emotional biases, and their impact on decision-making.
- Behavioral Investment Strategies: Explore goals-based investing, behaviorally modified asset allocation, and various models like Barnewall Two Way, BBK Five Way
- Limitations and Critiques: Analyze limitations of behaviorally modified asset allocation, biases in analyst forecasts, and the role of investment committees.
- Advisor-Client Dynamics: Examine the advisor-client relationship, portfolio construction considerations in DC plans and the influence of management on analysis
- Market Anomalies and Investment Strategies: Explore market anomalies, value and growth anomalies, and their implications for investment strategies
Who this course is for:
- Finance professionals and analysts seeking a deep understanding of Behavioral Finance principles.
- Financial advisors aiming to incorporate behavioral insights into their client interactions and portfolio management.
- Individuals interested in exploring the psychological factors shaping financial decision-making.
- Intermediate to advanced learners in finance looking to enhance their expertise in investment strategies and market behavior.
- Professionals engaged in investment management roles and decision-making within financial markets.
- Those who want to gain insights into the cognitive and emotional biases influencing financial choices.
Course Curriculum
- Introduction Behavioral Finance (10:05)
- Behavioral Finance Vs Traditional Finance (8:56)
- Utility Theory and its Axioms (7:35)
- Utility Theory and its Axioms Continues (6:23)
- Bayes Theory and Example (8:48)
- Bayes Theory and Utility (4:48)
- Rational Economic Man (8:33)
- Risk Aversion of Investors (9:26)
- Behavioral Finance Perpectives on Individuals (6:55)
- Prospect and Decision Making Theory (10:59)
- Bounded Rationality (4:03)
- Prospect Theory - Editing Phase (9:24)
- Isolation Effect (6:54)
- Example of Isolation Effect (8:40)
- Efficient Markets and Forms of Market Efficiency (7:19)
- Efficient Market Hypothesis (6:35)
- Market Anomalies (7:54)
- Market Anomalies Continues (7:29)
- Traditional Perspective of Portfolio Construction (9:16)
- Consumption and Savings Model (8:50)
- Behavioral Asset Pricing Model (5:11)
- Behavioral Portfolio Theory (11:41)
- Adaptive Market Hypothesis (7:04)
- Types of Analysis (8:27)
- Utility Theory (7:41)
- Risk Aversion Levels (8:26)
- Decision Making Theory (7:31)
- Prospect Theory (8:24)
- Prospect Theory Continue (7:41)
- Behavioural and Traditional Approach (7:59)
- Behavioural and Traditional Approach Continues (7:27)
- Cognitive vs Emotional Biases (11:24)
- Cognitive Errors (8:28)
- Cognitive Errors - Persevearence (8:24)
- Cognitive Errors - Information Processing (7:11)
- Cognitive Errors - Framing (6:47)
- EB - Loss Aversion (7:14)
- EB - Overconfidence (7:01)
- EB - Control Bias (6:52)
- Endowment Bias (5:32)
- Impact and Mitigation of Biases - For the Exam (8:04)
- Confirmation Bias Impact (10:13)
- illusion of Control Bias Impact (18:39)
- Framing Bias Impact (11:57)
- Emotional Biases (9:28)
- Self Control Bias - Impact (10:01)
- Status Quo Bias - Impact (11:09)
- Goals Based Investing (7:10)
- Behaviourally Modified Asset Allocation (7:45)
- Behaviourally Modified Asset Allocation Continues (8:33)
- Barnewall Two Way Model (8:09)
- BBK Five Way Model (9:43)
- Pompian Model (10:52)
- Pompian Model Continues (10:49)
- Dealing with BITs (6:52)
- Limitations of BIT (7:59)
- Advisor Client Relationship (8:25)
- Portfolio Construction (8:07)
- Portfolio Construction - DC Plans (7:58)
- BP-Indivisiol Show Mental Accounting (8:48)
- Analyst Forecasts (7:56)
- Influence of Company Management on Analysis (12:21)
- Analyst Bias in Conducting Research (12:01)
- Investment Committees (7:47)
- Market Anomalies-Harding (8:30)
- Value and Growth Anomalies (11:01)