IB99Q-20 Behavioural Finance
Introductory description
This module covers a variety of issues related to behavioural finance in banking.
Module aims
This module introduces key deviations from rationality that have been documented in behavioural science, and discusses how these deviations can affect the economy, and in particular central banks’ analyses across their macroeconomic, macro-prudential and micro-prudential responsibilities.
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Decision Heuristics: How do people form expectations about future outcomes
Cognitive Biases: deviations from rational expectations and their impact on financial markets
Expected utility theory and violations
Models used to evaluate risky situations, including prospect theory, framing, loss aversion and ambiguity aversion
Prospect Theory in Financial Markets
Do emotions influence the way people view uncertainty?
The phenomenon of overconfidence
The phenomenon of herding behaviour and market anomolies, including the disposition effect, group think and the momentum effect.
Efficient Market Hypothesis: evidence for and against, considering how Noise Traders impact on efficiency, Limits to Arbitrage and the Gradual Flow of information
Households delegate financial decisions to intermediaries. Can such delegation distort financial markets?
Implications for financial regulation
Experimental and Empirical research and evidence
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Demonstrate an in depth understanding of how behavioural finance can be applied to financial markets and central banking.
- Demonstrate an in depth understanding of how investors’ behaviour can deviate from rational benchmarks, and explain how these deviations can give rise informational inefficiency in financial markets
- Demonstrate a systematic understanding of key theories of decision under uncertainty from behavioural economics
- Demonstrate an in depth knowledge of the impact cognitive biases have on behaviour in financial markets
- Demonstrate a critical awareness of research and advanced scholarship in behavioural finance
- Reflect on and learn from some prior experience and thus be able to integrate new knowledge with past experience and apply it to a new situation
- Make sound judgements whilst understanding the limitations on judgements made in the absence of complete data
Indicative reading list
Reading lists can be found in Talis
Interdisciplinary
Apply knowledge of behavioural finance to other areas of central banking and real-world events
International
The course is global banking, so inherently covers a variety of international dimensions.
Subject specific skills
- Identify and critique behavioural phenomenon that cannot be explained by traditional theories
- Apply knowledge of behavioural finance to other areas of central banking and real-world events
- Draw on a range of concepts, information, research and perspectives in behavioural finance
Transferable skills
Written communication
Independent learning
Study time
| Type | Required |
|---|---|
| Lectures | 4 sessions of 1 hour (3%) |
| Online learning (independent) | 136 sessions of 1 hour (97%) |
| Total | 140 hours |
Private study description
No private study requirements defined for this module.
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You must pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Assessment group A
| Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
|---|---|---|---|
Assessment component |
|||
| Individual Assignment | 100% | 60 hours | Yes (extension) |
Reassessment component is the same |
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Feedback on assessment
Via my.wbs
There is currently no information about the courses for which this module is core or optional.