Podcast will be a blend of class lectures and interviews with finance/Econ professors and professionals.
A class introduction (no numbers) to the Racism topic. Frankly, I don't think it is great, but for such an important topic it did need an introduction. Short version: racism is really bad, but still here, and in this section we will look at the psychology of racism and what we need to do to overcome biases.
Most work in the field of behavioral finance focuses on the investment side of the fence. That is unfortunate as managers are people too and they fall prey to many of the same biases that investors do. In this section of the course we will look at how overconfident managers will take bigger risks than more rational managers.
WHen most people think of behavioral finance, they think of the material we will cover in this section. It is a look at how biases can impact investor returns. We will look at bubbles, excessive trading (and risk taking), and the social aspects of investing.
From Marketing to politics., from Healthcare to Education, from International Development to treating addictions, the things we learned in Behavioral Finance and Economics can be used to help make the world a better place.
This episode gives a short introduction into the two concepts covered in this part class:The concept of Scarcity as described in Mullainathan and Shafer's great book: Scarcity: The New Science of Having Less and How It Defines Our Lives. How having too little (or alternatively having too much stress) can impact brain development and rational decision making. PS: this may be my favorite part of the class. I see it constantly in my own life, but also in those of many of the people that BonaResponds helps.
While this is not a science class, we do need to have an understanding of the various parts of the brain, how we look at the brain, and how what we do (or don't do) can influence the brain and our decisions. We also look some at addiction as it gives us insights into how the brain works, and also in the context of being "addicted to risk".
This is an introduction to behavioral biases. The short version: thinking is hard. It can take time and effort. So we have evolved to come up with shortcuts and biases that do not always help us when it comes to financial decisions (or other kinds of decisions either).This material is central to the whole course. So be sure to understand it as you go through the various topics covered. A few of the links we will be covering in class are: Wikipedia, but very well done: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biasesDaniel Kahneman - Your Mind and Your MoDaniel Kahneman - Thinking, Fast and SlowDaniel Kahneman - Masters in BusinessDaniel Kahneman - Thinking, Fast and Slow Animated Book ReviewFightMediocrity - Priming, Halo Effect, Hindsight Bias - Thinking, Fast and Slow (Part 3)Hidden Brain - I’m Right, You’re WrongBig Think - Your Brain is so JudgementalLong Luong - Loss Aversion and The Endowment EffectBehavioral Finance and Market BehaviorMeir Statman - Interview with Meir Statman: Masters in Business (Audio)Laurie Santos - A Monkey Economy as Irrational as Ours
An Introduction to Behavioral Finance and Behavioral Economics at St. Bonaventure University. It is tailored to MBA 639 but can be listened to by anyone. Not sure what happened to the audio quality. Sounds like I was in a tunnel. Which I assure you I was not. But I recorded it twice and it sounded the same. So, here we go!:Here are some notes for those who are interested: My presentation on it:https://www.dropbox.com/s/tqzxaxzaujtiyrs/Presentation%20for%20Behavioral%20Science%20and%20Teaching%20Paper%20%281%29.pptx?dl=0 What is Behavioral Economics?https://vimeo.com/38663941 What is Behavioral Finance? http://www.ted.com/talks/dan_ariely_asks_are_we_in_control_of_our_own_decisionsGame Theory:http://www.cdam.lse.ac.uk/Reports/Files/cdam-2001-09.pdf If you want more, stay tuned! Or better, sign up for my class :)
Hostile takeover defenses. Takeover waves. Still no voice, but a little better. how to fight acquisitions Pre-bid defenses:Maximize Shareholder value!Shark repellentsSuper majority: For a takeover, you need more than 51% of votesFair Price Amendments: any takeover must be for more than some “fair price”Staggered Boards: Board members not all up for election at the same timePoison Pills (AKA Shareholder rights plans)Shop around clause: give you the right to shop around for a better dealDual classes of shares where managers/insiders hold multiple votes per share Post offer (i.e. you are in play!)Asset restructuringselling crown's jewels (divestiture, carve-out, spin-off)one-time dividend (this is also a Financial Restructuring)Financial RestructuringBuyback--possibly greenmailIncrease debtone-time dividend (this is also an asset restructuring)Litigation-sue everyoneMake it political: take it to the press etcPac-man Defense (make a counter bid on acquirer)White Knights- Find someone to come and take you over on more friendly terms.
In an attempt to wrap up MBA 610, I made a list of things on the horizon. It was a tough list to make. A few things that were really close: FinTech, raising interest rates, the role of government in markets, and more. The list: Income and Wealth inequalityThe Anti-globalization movement (a blip or a longer term thing?)AI and the coming machinesLiving longer and slower population growthHealth Care CostsGlobal WarmingThe bottom billionBig Data and online secrecyConfirmation bias and “us vs them”The changing of Wall Street: Passive and FinTech
First, let me apologize, I lost my voice for much of this week and this is definitely not the best audio quality. I am happy with the content however and I edited out most of my coughs :)The merger and acquisition market is part of the market for corporate control includes mergers and acquisitions, proxy fights, divestitures, spin-offs, carve-outs. Some of these deals are driven by tax reduction strategies, some by restructurings, some by a desire to retire, and others are pure valuation plays. But whatever the reason, the market is a big player (creating large fees for investment bankers as well) in the world of business.Why is the market for corporate control so important? It creates value by getting assets to higher valued users.It disciplines poor managers.It pressures managers (and boards) to keep stock prices high and to look out for shareholders.It allows firms to quickly bring products to marketIt is a part of tax reduction strategies.How a merger can create valueEconomies of scale--this allows fixed costs to be spread over higher revenues.Economies of vertical integration (lower Transaction costs)Combining complementary assets (drug company and sales force) leads to increased revenuesSynergy: the idea that assets work better together (1+1=3)Marketing or distributionMarket power--Esp with horizontal mergersElimination of poor managementAccess to a. materials b. customers, c. capitalLower taxesCost cutting
Shareholders' payoff looks like that of a call holder. Calls appreciate with volatility. So why do firms hedge? There are many reasons (at least theoretically): It makes contracting easier, it makes it easier to hire people, lowers the cost of debt, lowers expected bankruptcy costs, and lowers expected taxes.
I don't dive in super deep here but rather give you an overview/primer to the basic building blocks and option pricing models. It should be used in addition to the textbook and class notes, not instead of! :)
IPOs tend to be underpriced in short-run. That is to say, they go up on the first day of trading. In the longer-term (3-5 years) they tend up underperform their control groups.
Market efficiency is not a Binary YES/NO variable. Rather it is a continuum from not so efficient to very very efficient. NOTE . market efficiency does not imply perfection! :) Links I mention: https://helpified.com/paths/technically-not-passiveand Wisdom of Crowds (short and funny) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-FonWBEb0o On Warren Buffett's bet: http://fortune.com/2017/02/25/warren-buffett-scorches-the-hedge-funds/
A fast look at capital budgeting. Capital budgeting is deciding which assets you want on your balance sheet. The key point it to compare costs and benefits. This is EXACTLY what NPV does which is why I suggest you use NPV whenever possible.We end with a short discussion of Real Options
This is to accompany a look at the specs of a corn futures contract: http://www.cmegroup.com/trading/agricultural/grain-and-oilseed/corn_contract_specifications.html is what we will focus on.
A short look at/introduction to stock market indexes. We discuss both price-weighted indexes (such as the DOW) and value-weighted (such as the S&P 500).
This is a quick look at capital structure. Capital structure questions (how much debt to use) center on the tradeoff between tax savings and risk.
An introduction to the cost of equity and CAPM I should stress, that equity is not free. Investors want a return. That return is a cost to the firm. (even though it does not appear on the income statement). CAPM is a common way to estimate the cost. REMEMBER, THIS IS AN INTRODUCTION. It is meant to go with your textbook and class notes.
Behavioral finance is the coming together of psychology, economics, and finance. It is a fascinating topic that deserves much more coverage. This is just to introduce you and to whet your appetite! :) This is intended to go along with class notes and the textbook for MBA 610.
Valuation of stocks and bonds rests on Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) and market comparable (market multiple) valuation methods. This short introduction (along with the text and online notes) should help clarify what is often a difficult thing to do. This is part of the "notes" for MBA 610 at St. Bonaventure University. It also explains why capital budgeting and valuation are approximately the same thing.
I am teaching an online MBA class in Financial Management at St Bonaventure University. I will be sharing a series of short "classes" on various topics that we cover. The audio is intended to be used in coordination with the text and notes. But you can listen even if not in the class!
A home-run. A look at the inflation, shortages, and violence that is now widespread in Venezuela. A talk with Luis Guevara and Juan Farah. For more here are two helpified paths that will be used in classhttps://helpified.com/paths/venezuela-a-study-in-what-not-to-do-economicallyand https://helpified.com/paths/a-look-at-venezuela
Rene Pochop is a financial planner from Burlington VT who is on the BonaSIMM (http://BonaSIMM.org) board. She speaks here on potential conflicts of interest, the importance of your reputation, and ethics. Here is here bio etc: http://www.pochopfinancial.com/#page
Tom Cullen (SBU alum and co-founder of Launch Pad Labs) spoke on character and ethics in business.
Because we missed a "live" class, this is a way for the class to see what I think is important. It is unedited and a free flow talk on the past week of class. I would really like to do these every week for my classes if you find it useful.
MBA 610 class on portfolio math (week 5). two questions that usually make it to the test:1. How to calculate the standard deviation of a portfolio. 2. How to find expected return on a portfolio.
Class begins with a look at market efficiency in a classic informational sense, then introduces behavioral finance. This was from St. Patrick's day, so many people were missing from class
An introduction to Financial Management (MBA 610) at St. Bonaventure University. This was recorded in the evening section.
SIMM is Students in Money Management at St. Bonaventure. We have two portfolios: a traditional equity and fixed income portfolio and an energy hedge fund. For their final in the fall of 2015, I asked the students how we could make SIMM better. This episode summarizes their suggestions and adds a few of my own.
A few short talks on Regressions, Utility, and Indifference curves (NOTE THIS IS NOT A STATS CLASS--intuition and not a real stats class)
Market imperfections, collusion, cartel, tariffs, taxes, and impact of unions
Data Sources (not sure why entire thing is not saved) Also data Sources:here are a few data sites.http://www.gapminder.org/data/http://www.data.gov/http://data.worldbank.org/data-catalog/world-development-indicators?cid=GPD_WDIhttps://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/https://www.quandl.com/http://www.google.com/publicdata/directoryarticle w many sites mentionedhttp://www.datasciencecentral.com/profiles/blogs/the-free-big-data-sources-everyone-should-knowEconomics relies on empiricism. Empiricism relies on Data.If you want to do data analysis in lieu of an existing "project" let me know. We will definitely be using this in future classes
We did not dive very deep into any of the topics but covered several in anticipation for next week's exam.
Our third and final lecture on capital structure. Looks at the costs of having too much debt and introduces pecking order, tradeoff, and hybrid models of security issuance/capital structure.
Dr . Todd Palmer and I presented to SBU business faculty on some very useful online toolsMy part of the talk is here: http://bit.ly/1OgTqxF
Part econ, Part finance. This is mainly introductions (Friday Night class week 1)
Debt makes good times great and bad times horrible... that and a whole lot more in this class on capital structure. Thanks Yogi! Modigliani and Miller. https://helpified.com/paths/capital-structure-i more of my material on this
My helpified path to correspond with this podcasthttps://helpified.com/paths/public-offers-and-private-placements
A discussion of stock and bond pricing from MBA 626 (Investments)
What lead to the Capital Asset Pricing Model? notes:https://helpified.com/paths/capm-the-capital-asset-pricing-model
This is from my Finance 401 class. We cover a fast review of IPO process and look at some hypotheses why IPOs are underpriced. Links: http://site.warrington.ufl.edu/ritter/ipo-data/
Overview of the development of CAPM (portfolio math, types of risk, and CAPM itself).
While this was from Finance 401, it is very similar for other classes that discuss the development of CAPM. I dropped the history this year to get the development more or less in
This was a somewhat bad recording (I left the phone on podium) of Finance 401 at St. Bonaventure. Today's topic was bond pricing. We looked at liklihood of getting paid,, rating firms, default rates over time, i-rate spreads, LTCM, and a few other things. A good class, but I wish I had had better examples.
SKIP first 15-20 seconds This was a somewhat bad recording (I left the phone on podium) of Finance 401 at St. Bonaventure. Today's topic was bond pricing. We looked at liklihood of getting paid,, rating firms, default rates over time, i-rate spreads, LTCM, and a few other things. A good class, but I wish I had had better examples.
A look at Market Efficiency. From Weak form, to SemiStrong Form, to Strong Form. Conclusion? Markets are tough to beat, but not perfectly efficient. That said, to average investor, they are very tough to beat and passive investing (or largely passive) likely works best.
In this chapter, the book compares the index model (whereby assets are compared to a single index vs the Markowitz model that uses the covariances with all other assets with all other assets. It also discusses how bets are calculated and what adjusted betas represent.
A quick overview of Chapter 7 from the Bodie, Kane, and Marcus Investments textbook for my MBA 626 class. Topics include: portfolio math (calculating expected returns and Standard Deviations for a portfolio), Benefits (and limitations of) diversification, the Mean Variance Efficient Frontier (MVE), The Capital Allocation Line (CAL), and the Separation property (says if investors hold any risky asset, they should hold only the tangency portfolio...that is they should invest along the Capital Allocation Line)
Chapter 6 looks at allocation to risky assets. It begins with speculation and gambling and then moves to utility measurements, risk aversion, and indifference curves. It then discusses the Capital Allocation Line and eventually the Capital Market Line. It is a short chapter.