满意选择
经济
过度自信效应
有效市场假说
损失厌恶
启发式
行为经济学
金融市场
竞赛(生物学)
有限理性
适应(眼睛)
理性
市场效率
理性预期
微观经济学
实证经济学
金融经济学
心理学
股票市场
认识论
计算机科学
认知科学
计量经济学
马
生物
财务
生态学
操作系统
哲学
神经科学
古生物学
标识
DOI:10.3905/jpm.2004.442611
摘要
One of the most influential ideas in the past 30 years is the efficient markets hypothesis, the idea that market prices incorporate all information rationally and instantaneously. The emerging discipline of behavioral economics and finance has challenged the EMH, arguing that markets are not rational, but rather driven by fear and greed. Research in the cognitive neurosciences suggests these two perspectives are opposite sides of the same coin. An adaptive markets hypothesis that reconciles market efficiency with behavioral alternatives applies the principles of evolution?competition, adaptation, and natural selection?to financial interactions. Extending Simon9s notion of ?satisficing? with evolutionary dynamics, the author argues that much of what behaviorists cite as counter-examples to economic rationality?loss aversion, overconfidence, overreaction, mental accounting, and other behavioral biases?is in fact consistent with an evolutionary model of individual adaptation to a changing environment via simple heuristics. The adaptive markets hypothesis offers a number of surprisingly concrete implications for portfolio management.
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