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Overconfident Investors, Predictable Returns, and Excessive Trading
by
Daniel, Kent
, Hirshleifer, David
in
Accumulation
/ Assets
/ Bias
/ Confidence
/ Economic models
/ Economic theory
/ Financial economics
/ Financial portfolios
/ Financial securities
/ High risk
/ Investment advisors
/ Investment risk
/ Investors
/ Markets
/ Predictability
/ Price momentum
/ Prices
/ Rates of return
/ Rational expectations
/ Securities trading
/ Studies
/ Symposium: Overconfidence
/ Trade
/ Trading
2015
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Overconfident Investors, Predictable Returns, and Excessive Trading
by
Daniel, Kent
, Hirshleifer, David
in
Accumulation
/ Assets
/ Bias
/ Confidence
/ Economic models
/ Economic theory
/ Financial economics
/ Financial portfolios
/ Financial securities
/ High risk
/ Investment advisors
/ Investment risk
/ Investors
/ Markets
/ Predictability
/ Price momentum
/ Prices
/ Rates of return
/ Rational expectations
/ Securities trading
/ Studies
/ Symposium: Overconfidence
/ Trade
/ Trading
2015
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Overconfident Investors, Predictable Returns, and Excessive Trading
by
Daniel, Kent
, Hirshleifer, David
in
Accumulation
/ Assets
/ Bias
/ Confidence
/ Economic models
/ Economic theory
/ Financial economics
/ Financial portfolios
/ Financial securities
/ High risk
/ Investment advisors
/ Investment risk
/ Investors
/ Markets
/ Predictability
/ Price momentum
/ Prices
/ Rates of return
/ Rational expectations
/ Securities trading
/ Studies
/ Symposium: Overconfidence
/ Trade
/ Trading
2015
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Overconfident Investors, Predictable Returns, and Excessive Trading
Journal Article
Overconfident Investors, Predictable Returns, and Excessive Trading
2015
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Overview
The last several decades have witnessed a shift away from a fully rational paradigm of financial markets toward one in which investor behavior is influenced by psychological biases. Two principal factors have contributed to this evolution: a body of evidence showing how psychological bias affects the behavior of economic actors; and an accumulation of evidence that is hard to reconcile with fully rational models of security market trading volumes and returns. In particular, asset markets exhibit trading volumes that are high, with individuals and asset managers trading aggressively, even when such trading results in high risk and low net returns. Moreover, asset prices display patterns of predictability that are difficult to reconcile with rational-expectations–based theories of price formation. In this paper, we discuss the role of overconfidence as an explanation for these patterns.
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