This book bridges behavioral economics and the classical models in finance to show that there is no contradiction between them.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Haim Levy is Miles Robinson Professor of Business Administration at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Dean of the Academic Center of Law and Business, Israel. The author of hundreds of articles in leading academic journals and about twenty books, he has obtained the ranking of the most prolific researcher in finance in the world covering the forty years through 1986 and the most prolific researcher in finance in the world in the core sixteen finance journals covering the fifty-year period through 2005. A co-author with Nobel Laureates Harry Markowitz and Paul Samuelson, Professor Levy's major research contributions have been to the field of stochastic dominance, which sets forth the criteria for decision making under conditions of uncertainty, in both expected utility and prospect theory paradigms. He has also developed economic models for equilibrium asset pricing in an imperfect market. Professor Levy received the Hebrew University's Prize for Excellence in Research in 1996 and the Emet Prize in 2006. He has served as economic adviser to the Bank of Israel and held a University Professor position at the University of Florida and visiting academic positions at the University of California, Berkeley and the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. He received his Ph.D. from the Hebrew University in 1969 and has held a full professorship there since 1976.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Overview 2. Expected utility theory 3. Expected utility and investment decision rules 4. The mean-variance rule 5. The capital asset pricing model (CAPM) 6. Extensions of the CAPM 7. The CAPM cannot be rejected: empirical and experimental evidence 8. Theoretical and empirical criticisms of the M-V rule 9. Prospect theory and expected utility 10. Cumulative decision weights: no dominance violation 11. M-V rule, the CAPM, and the cumulative prospect theory: coexistence.
1. Overview; 2. Expected utility theory; 3. Expected utility and investment decision rules; 4. The mean-variance rule; 5. The capital asset pricing model (CAPM); 6. Extensions of the CAPM; 7. The CAPM cannot be rejected: empirical and experimental evidence; 8. Theoretical and empirical criticisms of the M-V rule; 9. Prospect theory and expected utility; 10. Cumulative decision weights: no dominance violation; 11. M-V rule, the CAPM, and the cumulative prospect theory: coexistence.
1. Overview 2. Expected utility theory 3. Expected utility and investment decision rules 4. The mean-variance rule 5. The capital asset pricing model (CAPM) 6. Extensions of the CAPM 7. The CAPM cannot be rejected: empirical and experimental evidence 8. Theoretical and empirical criticisms of the M-V rule 9. Prospect theory and expected utility 10. Cumulative decision weights: no dominance violation 11. M-V rule, the CAPM, and the cumulative prospect theory: coexistence.
1. Overview; 2. Expected utility theory; 3. Expected utility and investment decision rules; 4. The mean-variance rule; 5. The capital asset pricing model (CAPM); 6. Extensions of the CAPM; 7. The CAPM cannot be rejected: empirical and experimental evidence; 8. Theoretical and empirical criticisms of the M-V rule; 9. Prospect theory and expected utility; 10. Cumulative decision weights: no dominance violation; 11. M-V rule, the CAPM, and the cumulative prospect theory: coexistence.
Rezensionen
'Currently, trillions of dollars are managed with the aid of quantitative techniques. Major paradigms of quantitative finance include expected utility theory, mean-variance optimization, the closely-related capital asset pricing model, prospect theory, and (Professor Levy's own creation) stochastic dominance. In this book, Professor Levy presents a penetrating analysis of the relationships among these paradigms, often finding mutual support where others find only conflict.' Harry Markowitz, Nobel Laureate, University of California, San Diego
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