Greg Davies on Behavioural Finance [Archive.org URL] Feb 22, 2010 / Comment / 60,819 views / / Favorite 0The 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 postPyramidal Blind Spots: Perils of International Joint VenturesNext post →Peter F. DruckerMore Related PostsAuthor Talks: What’s new in Valuation?Daniel MarkovitsThe Groucho Marx Theory of Efficient MarketsWhy Markets Need Not Fear UncertaintyHave Central Bankers Lost Their Power? There Are No CommentsClick to Add the First »Leave a Reply Cancel replyYour email address will not be published.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.