Essays about: "behavioral finance"
Showing result 26 - 30 of 108 essays containing the words behavioral finance.
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26. Stock market response to unsustainable conduct within listed companies
University essay fromAbstract : News spreads quickly in our rapidly innovative world, which has implications for companies when scandals are exposed to the public. In this report, we explore whether there is a connection between unethical actions and the reaction and publication of those acts in terms of environmental and social issues. READ MORE
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27. The Adoption of Artificial Intelligence in Swedish Funds
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Företagsekonomiska institutionenAbstract : Fund managers have historically made use of traditional portfolio strategies such as Markowitz portfolio selection, as part of their decision making. But as the world has started to shift towards a more automated lifestyle, the question arises if fund management will follow. READ MORE
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28. The Impact of COVID-19 on the European Commercial Banking Sector: A Cross-country Empirical Analysis
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för redovisning och finansieringAbstract : This paper investigates the impact of COVID-19 on the European commercial banking sector. Using panel data, we study the effect of the severity of the pandemic on bank lending, customer depositing behavior, and the provisioning for credit losses. READ MORE
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29. In the Eye of a Pandemic: An Event Study of the Swedish Stock Market Reactions to the Covid-19 Press Conferences
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för finansiell ekonomiAbstract : Using intraday trading data for the Swedish stock market, this paper examines the stock market reactions to The Public Health Agency of Sweden's daily press conferences covering Covid-19. Our results indicate that stock returns immediately drop at the 1% significance level when negative news are announced. READ MORE
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30. The Performance of Stocks Earning Extreme Single-Day Returns: Evidence from Sweden
University essay from Handelshögskolan i Stockholm/Institutionen för finansiell ekonomiAbstract : In 2011, Bali et al. presented evidence that stocks with extreme one and multi day-returns significantly underperform stocks with less extreme returns in the following month. They attributed this to investors exhibiting a preference for stocks with lottery-like payoffs. READ MORE