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Next Dates: - Introduction to QuantLib Development with Luigi Ballabio, September 2 - 4, 2013 - £1700

 

May 2012

The Wrong Way To Use An Index Tracker

May 31, 2012 Comments (0)

Sedate and Inept Index tracking is supposed to be a sedate affair, a quiet contemplation of the tempestuous dynamics of market forces from an appropriate distance.  A passive approach to investing, if you will. Instead it seems that people who use index trackers either don’t understand that they’re simple commodities or simply trade them like any other instrument available to private investors: frequently, ineptly and in a manner calculated to abrogate their inbuilt advantages. ...

Dirty Money: There IS Accounting For Taste

May 29, 2012 Comments (0)

Unfungible People The link between emotions and decision making, particularly financial decision making, has been recognized for years.  This is a tricky area because the connection between emotions and rationality is difficult to unpick, which is why making investment decisions while in an emotional state is usually not recommended. To complicate matters, though, it now appears that we associate certain types of money with certain types of emotion, and will only spend such money on...

Happy People Make Terrible Traders

May 24, 2012 Comments (0)

Happiness causes over-optimism which causes over-trading. Repeat until crash occurs.Optimistic Fools People who are happy are more confident and expect to make more money by trading, and anticipate taking lower risks in doing so. This result ought to be enough to depress most people, but most people are optimistic and don’t depress easily. This is especially true if they make money on their random trades, because that makes them happier, more optimistic and more prone to trading. Even...

Parsimonious, Big Picture Behavioral Bias

May 22, 2012 Comments (0)

107 Ways of Being Wrong As we’ve seen in The Big List of Behavioral Biases, there are 101 (well, 107 at the time of writing) ways in which people exhibit irrational biases. The basic idea, that we’re affected by these biases in predictable ways, is now well accepted. The problem is that there are simply too many biases for this to be the be-all and end-all of the explanation of market irrationality. So while the basic concepts of behavioral finance are understood, in the sense that...

Become A Safer Investor – Get Married

May 17, 2012 Comments (0)

Married CEOs and fund managers take less risks than single ones Sex and CEOs Sexual selection – the competition for mates – lies at the heart of Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection. All things being equal – which they never are, of course – any behavior or attribute which makes an individual more attractive to breeding partners should end up being selected for because the unsuccessful individuals in the mating game leave no offspring. Given the biological imperative to pass on their...

Greece, Catharsis and the ECB Moneylenders

May 14, 2012 Comments (0)

Viciously Circular In the depths of the Great Depression US unemployment hovered around the 25% mark, with 30% of the youth unemployed.  Today in Greece the comparable numbers are 22% and a scarcely believable 54% (see: Greek Labour Force Study). Meanwhile another €4.2 billion has been pumped into Greece by the European Central Bank (ECB) via the European Financial Stability Facility, despite the vast protest vote against the externally imposed austerity measures delivered in their...

Is Your CEO A Psychopath?

May 10, 2012 Comments (0)

“She was interviewing a psychopath.  She showed him a picture of a frightened face and asked him to identify the emotions.  He said he didn’t know what the emotion was but it was the face people pulled just before he killed them.” (The Psychopath Test, Jon Ronson) A Boardroom Blitz Psychopaths lack empathy, are pathological liars, have an enormous sense of self-worth, are impulsive, irresponsible and won’t accept responsibility for their own actions.  They make up 1% of the total...

Angels, Pinheads, Capital Gains and Dividends

May 8, 2012 Comments (0)

A Middle Aged Dispute Medieval scholars have a reputation for disputation on the most abstract and rarefied of theological questions, the “how many angels can dance of the head of a pin” problem.  Of course, this is now a byword for particularly pointless, time-wasting debates. Modern investors have their own equivalent conundrums, such as “does market growth come from dividends or capital growth?”  Just like its Middle Ages counterparts it turns out that the answer is neither obvious...

Mindless With Money

May 2, 2012 Comments (0)

Non-conscious Numbskulls We all know the feeling of mindlessness. You get it when you drive the same roads as usual and get out at the end not remembering anything about the journey, or when you eat a meal without tasting it, or leave a meeting without the faintest idea what just happened. Yet to everyone around us we’ve behaved just the same way we always do. There’s something really odd about this, because it suggests that we don’t need to be conscious of what we’re doing to achieve what we...