第2版前言
第1章 行為學基礎 1
1.1 傳統公司金融決策與心理學現象 1
1.2 偏差 4
1.3 經驗推斷法 11
1.4 框架效應 16
1.5 緩解陷阱 23
本章小結 25
拓展性閱讀 26
關鍵詞 26
網絡探索 27
本章習題 27
小案例 巴拿馬運河 30
第2章 行為分析學簡介 32
2.1 公司金融決策的傳統分析方法 32
2.2 從行為學角度看公司金融決策方法 33
2.3 剖析偏差 35
2.4 剖析經驗推斷法 41
2.5 價值破壞與太陽微係統公司的結局 43
2.6 框架效應分析 44
2.7 糾偏與助推 51
本章小結 52
拓展性閱讀 53
關鍵詞 53
網絡探索 53
本章習題 53
小案例 福島第一核電站泄漏事件 55
第3章 價值評估 58
3.1 估值的傳統分析方法 58
3.2 股票價格的經驗推斷法 59
3.3 一位首席財務官對經驗估值推斷方法的使用 61
3.4 分析師如何評價企業:一個闡述性案例 61
3.5 經驗估值法與偏差:基於事前的分析 66
3.6 經驗推斷法與偏差:基於事後的分析 72
3.7 與自由現金流模型有關的偏差 75
3.8 委托代理衝突 77
本章小結 77
拓展性閱讀 78
關鍵詞 78
網絡探索 78
本章習題 79
小案例 安泰保險公司 81
第4章 資本預算 85
4.1 資本預算的傳統分析方法 85
4.2 規劃謬誤 86
4.3 資本預算中的過度樂觀和過度自信 88
4.4 項目采納的準則 95
4.5 不願終止已虧損項目 99
4.6 確認性偏差和沉沒成本:實例說明 102
本章小結 105
拓展性閱讀 105
關鍵詞 106
網絡探索 106
本章習題 106
小案例 美高梅公司國際酒店集團:拉斯維加斯城市中心賭場 107
第5章 無效市場與公司決策 110
5.1 市場效率的傳統理論 110
5.2 市場效率的行為理論 111
5.3 市場效率、盈餘指導以及淨現值 115
5.4 股票分拆 116
5.5 公司首次公開發行決策 118
本章小結 126
拓展性閱讀 126
關鍵詞 126
網絡探索 126
本章習題 127
小案例 Groupon網、Facebook和Twitter的首次公開發行 128
第6章 風險和收益 131
6.1 風險和收益的傳統分析方法 131
6.2 市場風險溢價估值中的心理因素 133
6.3 財務主管對市場風險溢價的判斷偏誤 136
6.4 管理者、內部人交易和賭徒謬誤 140
6.5 財務主管對風險、收益和摺現率的判斷偏誤 141
本章小結 143
拓展性閱讀 144
關鍵詞 144
網絡探索 144
本章習題 144
小案例 埃隆·馬斯剋,特斯拉汽車,風險和收益 145
第7章 資本結構 149
7.1 資本結構的傳統分析方法 149
7.2 關於融資和投資的行為考慮 151
7.3 管理者如何在實踐中對資本結構進行選擇 153
7.4 市場擇時:如何成功 157
7.5 財務靈活性和項目門檻迴報率 161
7.6 投資對現金流的敏感性 163
7.7 心理學現象與融資、投資和現金之間的相互依存 165
7.8 迎閤市場?來自短期與長期的衝突 171
本章小結 172
拓展性閱讀 173
關鍵詞 173
網絡探索 173
本章習題 173
小案例 Cogent通信公司和PSINet 176
第8章 股利政策 180
8.1 股利的傳統分析方法 180
8.2 股利和投資者:心理學 181
8.3 管理者如何看待股利:調查數據 185
8.4 股利政策和投資者偏好 189
本章小結 193
拓展性閱讀 194
關鍵詞 194
網絡探索 194
本章習題 195
小案例 蘋果公司 196
第9章 代理衝突和公司治理 200
9.1 代理衝突的傳統分析方法 200
9.2 基於業績的薪酬:實踐 201
9.3 一些心理學現象 204
9.4 激勵、會計、審計和心理 209
9.5 《薩班斯-奧剋斯利法案》和COSO 212
9.6 欺詐和股票期權:一個例證 213
9.7 道德和欺騙 217
本章小結 222
拓展性閱讀 222
關鍵詞 223
網絡探索 223
本章習題 223
小案例 赫茲租車公司 225
第10章 兼並與收購 227
10.1 兼並與收購的傳統分析方法 227
10.2 贏傢詛咒 228
10.3 過度樂觀、過度自信及其他影響收購公司管理者的心理現象 228
10.4 相關理論 233
10.5 美國在綫-時代華納公司:因相信市場價格而導緻的危害 238
10.6 惠普公司和康柏電腦:董事會決策 243
本章小結 248
拓展性閱讀 249
關鍵詞 249
網絡探索 249
本章習題 249
小案例 雅虎! 251
第11章 財務管理和群體決策過程 257
11.1 財務管理的傳統分析方法 257
11.2 過程損失 258
11.3 群體錯誤的一般原因 259
11.4 全球金融危機:不同公司的經驗 262
本章小結 266
拓展性閱讀 267
關鍵詞 267
網絡探索 267
本章習題 267
小案例 東芝集團 268
注釋 271
Table of Contents
Preface to the Second Edition
Chapter 1
Behavioral Foundations 1
1.1 Traditional Corporate Financial Decisions and Psychological Tasks 1
Dual Systems 3
1.2 Biases 4
Excessive Optimism 4
Overconfidence 6
Confirmation Bias 8
Illusion of Control 9
1.3 Heuristics 11
Representativeness 11
Availability 12
Anchoring and Adjustment 13
Affect Heuristic 14
Interacting Phenomena 15
1.4 Framing Effects 16
Loss Aversion 16
The Fourfold Risk Pattern 17
Framing Pitfalls 19
Prospect Theory 21
Aspiration Points 22
1.5 Mitigating Pitfalls 23
Summary 25
Additional Behavioral Readings 26
Key Terms 26
Explore the Web 27
Chapter Questions 27
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 1 Are Available at www.mhhe.com /shefrin2e 30
Minicase: Panama Canal 30
Case Analysis Questions 31
Chapter 2
Introduction to Behavioral Analysis 32
2.1 Traditional Treatment of Corporate Financial Decisions 32
2.2 Behavioral Treatment of Corporate Financial Decisions 33
2.3 Analyzing Biases 35
Excessive Optimism 36
Overconfidence 38
Confirmation Bias 40
Illusion of Control 40
2.4 Analyzing Heuristics 41
Representativeness 41
Availability 41
Anchoring and Adjustment 42
Affect Heuristic 42
2.5 Value Destruction and Sun’s Endgame 43
2.6 Analyzing Framing Effects 44
Loss Aversion 46
Aversion to a Sure Loss 48
Lawsuits and Aftermath 49
2.7 Debiasing and Nudges 51
Summary 52
Additional Behavioral Readings 53
Key Terms 53
Explore the Web 53
Chapter Questions 53
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 2 Are Available at www.mhhe.com/shefrin2e 55
Minicase: Nuclear Meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi 55
Case Analysis Questions 57
Chapter 3Valuation 58
3.1 Traditional Approach to Valuation 58
3.2 Target Price Heuristics 59
P∕E Heuristic 60
PEG Heuristic 60
Price-to-Sales Heuristic 60
3.3 A CFO’s Reliance on Valuation Heuristics 61
3.4 How Analysts Value Firms: An Illustrative Example 61
Analyst Mary Meeker 61
The Morgan Stanley Team’s Mid-2004 Price Target for eBay 62
3.5 Valuation Heuristics and Biases: in Foresight 66
Optimism Bias: In Foresight 66
Biases Associated with P∕E, PEG, and PVGO: In Foresight 69
Biases Related to the 1∕n Heuristic: In Foresight 71
Biases Using the CAPM Heuristic: In Foresight 72
3.6 Valuation Heuristics and Biases: In Hindsight 72
3.7 Biases Associated with Free Cash Flow Formula 75
3.8 Agency Conflicts 77
Summary 77
Additional Behavioral Readings 78
Key Terms 78
Explore the Web 78
Chapter Questions 79
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 3 Are Available at www.mhhe.com /shefrin2e 81
Minicase: Aetna 81
Case Analysis Questions84
Chapter 4Capital Budgeting 85
Traditional Treatment of Capital Budgeting 85
The Planning Fallacy 86
The Planning Fallacy in Aircraft Manufacturing 87
4.3 Excessive Optimism and Overconfidence in Capital Budgeting 88
Excessive Optimism in Public-Sector Projects 88
Excessive Optimism in Private-Sector Projects 89
Agency Conflict Determinants of Excessive Optimism 91
Overconfidence 92
Psychological Determinants of Excessive Optimism and Overconfidence 92
4.4 Project Adoption Criteria 95
The Importance of Intuition 96
The Affect Heuristic 97
Choice, Value, and the Affect Heuristic 97
4.5 Reluctance to Terminate Losing Projects 99
Aversion to a Sure Loss 99
Escalation of Commitment 101
4.6 Confirmation Bias and Sunk Costs: Illustrative Example 102
Behavioral Bias and Agency Conflicts at Syntex 103
Summary 105
Additional Behavioral Readings 105
Key Terms 106
Explore the Web 106
Chapter Questions 106
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 4 Are Available at www.mhhe.com/shefrin2e 107
Minicase: MGM Resorts International: Las Vegas CityCenter 107
Case Analysis Questions 109
Chapter 5Inefficient Markets and Corporate Decisions 110
5.1 Traditional Approach to Market Efficiency 110
5.2 Behavioral Approach to Market Efficiency 111
Irrational Exuberance and Stocks as a Whole 112
Sentiment Beta 112
Limits to Arbitrage 113
Risk and Sentiment 114
Managerial Decisions: Market Timing and Catering 114
5.3 Market Efficiency, Earnings Guidance, and NPV 115
5.4 Stock Splits 116
Example: Tandy’s Stock Split 117
5.5 To IPO or Not to IPO 118
Three Phenomena 118
IPO Decisions 119
Summary 126
Additional Behavioral Readings 126
Key Terms 126
Explore the Web 126
Chapter Questions 127
Minicase: The IPOs of Groupon, Facebook, andTwitter 128
Case Analysis Questions 130
Chapter 6Perceptions about Risk and Return 131
6.1 Traditional Treatment of Risk and Return 131
6.2 Psychological Issues Estimating the Market Risk Premium 133
Die-Rolling 134
Extrapolation Bias: The Hot-Hand Fallacy 135
Gambler’s Fallacy 136
6.3 Biases in Financial Executives’ Judgments of Market Risk Premium 136
Overview 137
Detailed Look 137
6.4 Executives, Insider Trading, and Gambler’s Fallacy 140
6.5 Biases in Financial Executives’ Judgments Relating to Risk, Return, and Discount Rates 141
Discount Rate and WACC 142
Summary 143
Additional Behavioral Readings 144
Key Terms 144
Explore the Web 144
Chapter Questions 144
Minicase: Elon Musk, Tesla Motors, Risk, and Return 145
Case Analysis Questions 148
Chapter 7Capital Structure 149
7.1 Traditional Approach to Capital Structure 149
7.2 Behavioral Considerations Pertaining to Financing and Investment 151
7.3 How Do Managers Make Choices About Capital Structure inPractice 153
New Equity: Market Timing 154
New Debt: Financial Flexibility and Debt Timing 155
Target Debt-to-Equity Ratio 155
Traditional Pecking Order 157
7.4 Market Timing: How Successful 157
Perception of Overvalued Equity: New Issues 158
Perception of Undervalued Equity: Repurchases 159
Debt Market Timing 160
7.5 Financial Flexibility and Project Hurdle Rates 161
Undervalued Equity: Cash-Poor Firms Reject Some Positive NPV Projects 161
Undervalued Equity for Cash-Limited Firms: Invest or Repurchase 161
7.6 Sensitivity of Investment to Cash Flow 163
7.7 Psychological Phenomena and Interdependencies among Financing, Investment, and Cash 165
Excessive Optimism, Overconfidence, andCash 167
Identifying Excessively Optimistic, Overconfident Executives 168Assessing Value 169
7.8 Catering and the Conflict Between Short-Term and Long-Term Horizons 171
Summary 172
Additional Behavioral Readings 173
Key Terms 173
Explore the Web 173
Chapter Questions 173
Minicase: Cogent Communications andPSINet 176
Case Analysis Questions 177
Chapter 8Dividend Policy 180
8.1 Traditional Approach to Payouts 180
8.2 Dividends and Investors: Psychology 181
Dividends and Risk: Bird in the Hand 181
Self-Control and Behavioral Life Cycle Hypothesis: Widows and Orphans 182
Institutional Investors 184
8.3 Survey Data Describing How Managers Think about Dividends 185
Changing Payout Policies: Some History 185
Survey Evidence 186
8.4 Dividend Policy and Investors’ Tastes 189Citizens Utilities Company 189
Catering and Price Effects 190
Behavioral Signaling 191
Summary 193
Additional Behavioral Readings 194
Key Terms 194
Explore the Web 194
Chapter Questions 195
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 8 Are Available at www.mhhe.com/shefrin2e 196
Minicase: Apple 196
Case Analysis Questions 198
Chapter 9Agency Conflicts and Corporate Governance 200
9.1 Traditional Approach to Agency Conflicts 200
9.2 Paying for Performance in Practice 201
Low Variability 202
Dismissal 202
Stock Options 202
Shareholder Rights 203
9.3 Psychological Phenomena 204
From the Mouths of Directors 204
Prospect Theory and Stock Option-Based Compensation 204
Risk Aversion and Impatience 206
Relative Incomes 209
9.4 Incentives, Accounting, Auditing, and Psychology 209
Earnings Management 210
Auditing 210
9.5 Sarbanes-Oxley and COSO 212
Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) 212
COSO 213
9.6 Fraud and Stock Options: Illustrative Example 213
Signs of Disease 216
9.7 Ethics and Cheating 217
Why Students Cheat 219
Ethics and Psychology: Why People Cheat 219
Summary 222
Additional Behavioral Readings 222
Key Terms 223
Explore the Web 223
Chapter Questions 223
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 9 Are Available at www.mhhe.com/shefrin2e 225
Minicase: Hertz 225
Case Analysis Questions 226
Chapter 10Mergers and Acquisitions 227
10.1 Traditional Approach to M&A 227
10.2 The Winner’s Curse 228
10.3 Optimism, Overconfidence, and Other Psychological Phenomena Impacting Acquiring Executives 228
Psychological Drivers of Risk in M&A 231
Reference Point-Based Heuristic Effects on Deal Negotiations 232
10.4 Theory 233
Symmetric Information, Rational Managers, and Efficient Prices 233
Excessive Optimism and Overconfidence When Prices Are Efficient 234
Inefficient Prices, the Acquisition Premium, andCatering 235
Asymmetric Information and the Winner’s Curse 237
10.5 AOL Time Warner: The Danger of Trusting Market Prices 238
Strategy and Synergy 238
Valuation 238
Asset Writedown 240
Hubris 242
Aftermath 242
10.6 Hewlett-Packard and Compaq Computer: Board Decisions 243
The Merger Alternative 243
Psychological Basis for the Decision to Acquire Compaq 244
Valuation 244
HP’s Board Accepts Reality 246
Aftermath 247
Summary 248
Additional Behavioral Readings 249
Key Terms 249
Explore the Web 249
Chapter Questions 249
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter 10 Are Available at www.mhhe.com/shefrin2e 251
Minicase: Yahoo! 251
Case Analysis Questions 255
Chapter 11Financial Management and Group Process 257
11.1 Traditional Approach to Financial Management 257
11.2 Process Loss 258
11.3 General Reasons for Group Errors 259
Groupthink 259
Poor Information Sharing 260
Inadequate Motivation 262
11.4 The Global Financial Crisis: Experiences of Different Firms 262
Financial Instability Hypothesis 263
Problematic Group Process and Psychological Phenomena at Financial Firms 264
Summary 266
Additional Behavioral Readings 267
Key Terms 267
Explore the Web 267
Chapter Questions 267
Additional Resources and Materials for Chapter11 Are Avallable at www.mhhe.com/shefrin2e 268
Case Analysis Questions 269
Endnotes 271
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