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Course Information

Behavioral Finance & Economics (FIN 306)

Term: 2023-2024 Spring

Faculty

Faten Ben BouheniShow MyInfo popup for Faten Ben Bouheni
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Schedule

Tue-Thu, 11:10 AM - 12:30 PM (1/22/2024 - 5/17/2024) Location: MENLO FMO 307

Description

FIN 306 - BEHAVIORAL FINANCE & ECONOMICS Classical financial theory is based on several assumptions, including rational behavior of market participants and market efficiency. In recent decades empirical studies and experiments accumulated a body of evidence that in reality people do not always behave rationally demonstrating so-called anomalies which lead to market inefficiency. Objectives of this course are to introduce students to alternative explanations of human behavior – neoclassical utility theory and behavioral prospect theory; to study in detail financial market anomalies and paradoxes, caused by irrational behavior; and to learn how managers and regulators can take irrational behavior into account in decision making process. Cross-listed with ECO 306. Prerequisite: ECO 201, MTH 251 "C-" or better, MTH 110 "C-" or better, FIN 220