Tag Archives: Behavioural finance

New bubbles from misguided monetary policy

Have any lessons been learned following the Great Financial Crisis? Around the world, it looks like new bubbles are growing. Certainly, the crisis showed that central banks and politicians can move decisively on the threat of economic collapse. But the sequel has been years of bad policy; propping up banks, bad loans and unsustainable growth. […]

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3 key psychological challenges for investors

What are the main challenges to achieving good long term returns? Investors focus mainly on what the stockmarket might do; less so on their own behaviour. Some of the human behaviour that confers advantage in everyday life can drive poor investment decisions. The big challenges include; how we search for patterns and trends, the desire […]

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Investors love stories, but no happy ending for Emerging Markets

Investors love a good story, but the latest chapter of the emerging markets growth story has come as a nasty surprise to many. There may be much worse to come. Narratives can help to make sense of facts and figures. Stories can convey meaning, by joining up often unrelated information, and they offer hope. But […]

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Not what was forecast: UK index funds lagging active managers

Many UK active funds are now outperforming passive funds. But prejudices rarely disappear when hit with the facts. It is human nature to disregard data that contradicts our misplaced beliefs. This may be why little attention has been paid to the remarkable results of many active UK fund managers – in the face of much […]

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Should we worry about China?

Investors struggle with bubbles. Sure, we know they eventually burst, but lessons are quickly forgotten. Now China is a puzzle: it might look like a bubble, but what to do? Uncontrolled Yen devaluation could break China’s Renminbi peg and trigger more global deflation. But, timing and is hard to assess. Analysts and the press pay […]

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Will China be sucked into the currency wars?

Currencies are fast becoming 2015’s big investment risk. A factor once largely ignored can now make or break performance. Already, sharp moves this year in the Swiss Franc and Euro have hit some funds hard. But, do investors get enough information from managers about the risks being run? Although many funds do not hedge, monthly […]

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QE’s unintended consequences: Pension deficits to hit balance sheets

QE is having some serious unintended consequences, increasing pension scheme deficits and hitting company finances. Driven by liquidity and deflation fears, UK government stock, gilts, beat shares and most other asset classes in 2014. Long dated gilts gained over 20%. The trend has even accelerated already this year. Yet many UK pension funds, endowments and […]

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US Dollar’s impact on emerging markets may have just begun

Investors rarely worry about the global economy running out of money. Faith in central banks and liquidity is deeply ingrained. It may even just be cynicism; a belief that central banks will print whatever politicians want. But could the global economy be entering a period where US Dollars are scarce? The Dollar is nearing an […]

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Why do the biggest companies disappoint on governance?

Tesco’s high profile failure reveals the interaction between incentives, failed strategy and governance. Unfortunately, despite hiring what should be the best non-executives, the record shows the biggest companies have more governance blow-ups. What is it about the way that big businesses operate that makes them more accident-prone, not less? Even the investors lucky enough not […]

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What can behavioural finance teach investors?

What can behavioural finance teach investors about interpreting financial and economic data? My talk at the Royal Institution’s 14-10 Club offers some examples of behavioural biases from reporting by central banks, companies and fund managers. The talk and slides can be viewed or uploaded as a pdf from this Dropbox link.

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