Investment Decision Making
Since many of you like Behavioral Finance research to help you improve your decision making process, please find attached some research papers on:
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 26th, 2019
Train Your Brain To Win Big!
When Playing the investing game, it’s easy to let your impulse make all the wrong moves. Learning to trick yourself can help.
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Let’s Put Things in Perspective
We decided this time to send you some charts to help you put things in perspective since the U.S. stock market went down 8% in July and August. Note that the market is still up 5% in the last 12 months and up 70% since March 2009.
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Human Brain and Decision-Making
Factors behind Investor Choices
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Challenges in Financial Advising
From the Scope of Behavioral Finance
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Challenges in Financial Advising
From the Scope of Behavioral Finance
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Countries and Culture in Behavioral Finance
Please find the first BFM Video at: http://www.youtube.com/v/FSU4Qqlt0q0
You will find investment strategies to help you reach financial security, grow your assets and achieve a comfortable retirement.
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Understanding Behavioral Finance
Rationality & Decision Making
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Investors Fail to Capture the Returns they Expected
Chasing Performance May Lower your Returns
Submitted by Your Personal CFO - Bourbon Financial Management on September 25th, 2019
Humans Can't Analyze All the Information Received
This one minute video shows that human attention is limited and that we can’t analyze all the information we receive.
http://viscog.beckman.illinois.edu/flashmovie/15.php