John R.Nofsinger – Investment Madness
Price: $25
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This book describes the important psychological biases that influence investment decisions. By recognizing, understanding, and avoiding these problems, investors can minimize the negative effects on their wealth. From the Back Cover WARNING: Allowing emotion to invade your investment decisions can be hazardous to your wealth.- Think about your investments more clearly
- How overconfident investors trade too much, take too many risks, and earn lower returns
- The investment impact of your self-image
- Why avoiding feelings of regret now will cause you even greater regrets later
- Yesterday’s trade, today’s emotions, tomorrow’s mistake
- Placing your recent investment experiences in realistic perspective
- The devil you know versus the devil you don’t
- Familiarity breeds investment―but not necessarily profit
- Is your memory playing tricks with you?
- You’re not alone. We’ll tell you what to do about it
- Not all information is alike
- Avoiding herd mentality: your chat room, your brother-in-law, and other temptations. Remember when dotcoms were going to end business as we know it?
- Why’d you fall for that Internet stock?
- Why’d you keep money in cash when it could’ve earned far better returns elsewhere?
- Why haven’t you fully funded your retirement plan when you know you should?
- Why do you always seem to buy high and sell low?
- Why does it look like everyone else is getting rich but you?
- See through the “illusion of control” that makes you overconfident about your investments
- Objectively evaluate the stocks and financial instruments you’ve inherited
- Recognize the feelings of pride, regret, and herd behavior that lead to disaster
- Improve your “mental accounting”―and your portfolio’s diversification
- JOHN NOFSINGER is a finance professor at Washington State University. His 1997 paper, “Herding and Feedback Trading by Institutional Investors” written with Richard W. Sias, was awarded “Best of the Best” and “Best Paper in Investments” by the Financial Management Association. He has also done advanced research for the New York Stock Exchange and the Association for Investment Management and Research. Nofsinger holds a doctorate from Washington State University.