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Joshua Coval
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Behavioral Finance: Benefiting from Irrational Investors
Jul 14, 2007 at 15:16
Do investors really behave rationally? Behavioral finance researchers Malcolm Baker and Joshua Coval don't think humans are such cold calculators. One proof: Individual and even institutional investors often give in to inertia and hold on to shares in unwanted stock. And therein lays opportunity for investment managers and firms.
Sweating it out in the classroom
Mar 13, 2007 at 19:12 | Source:
Money managers work in a stressful, competitive pressure cooker that's hard to appreciate from the safety of a business management classroom. That's why HBS professors Joshua Coval and Erik Stafford invented upTick-a market simulation program that has students sweating and strategizing as they recreate classic market scenarios.
Behavioral Finance: Benefiting from Irrational Investors
Jul 14, 2007 at 15:16
Do investors really behave rationally? Behavioral finance researchers Malcolm Baker and Joshua Coval don't think humans are such cold calculators. One proof: Individual and even institutional investors often give in to inertia and hold on to shares in unwanted stock. And therein lays opportunity for investment managers and firms.
Sweating it out in the classroom
Mar 13, 2007 at 19:12 | Source:
Money managers work in a stressful, competitive pressure cooker that's hard to appreciate from the safety of a business management classroom. That's why HBS professors Joshua Coval and Erik Stafford invented upTick-a market simulation program that has students sweating and strategizing as they recreate classic market scenarios.
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