Greg Davies on Behavioural Finance [Archive.org URL] Feb 22, 2010 / Comment / 60,811 views / The head of Behavioural Finance at Barclays Wealth says hot-brained humans often buy and sell right when they shouldn't. Content: Multimedia Content Author: Greg Davies Source: The Economist Subjects: Economics, FinanceRelated ContentA Marketer’s Guide to Behavioral Economics [Archive.org URL]A Survey of Behavioral Finance [Archive.org URL]Adam Smith, Behavioral Economist? [Archive.org URL]Behavioral Corporate Finance [Archive.org URL]Cognitive Biases – A Visual Study Guide [Archive.org URL]Disappointment Without Prior Expectation [Archive.org URL]Happiness Reveals a Lot about Our Choices — but It Isn’t Everything [Archive.org URL]Mind Over Money [Archive.org URL]Money Changes Everything [Archive.org URL]Reconciling Efficient Markets with Behavioral Finance: The Adaptive Markets Hypothesis [Archive.org URL]The Debt to Pleasure [Archive.org URL]The Pack Mentality: A Behavioral Finance View of Stock Price Comovement [Archive.org URL]The Rational-Behavioral Debate in Financial Economics [Archive.org URL]Watch How You Think [Archive.org URL]What Is Behavioral Economics? [Archive.org URL]What Lies Behind Those “Rational” Decisions? [Archive.org URL]Like this content? Why not share it?Post navigation← Previous postBusiness Intelligence – Secret Weapon to Successful BusinessNext post →Startups in 13 SentencesMore Related PostsHave Central Bankers Lost Their Power?Fostering better decisions through holistic ROI estimatesHow Piketty is wrong—and rightBetsey StevensonJustin Wolfers There Are No CommentsClick to Add the First »Leave a Reply Cancel replyYour email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment *Name * Email * Website Receive a monthly newsletter of new content added (no spam)ΔThis site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.