Hersh Shefrin

Transcription

Hersh Shefrin
Behavioral Insights into
Governance and Risk
November 2014
Hersh Shefrin
Mario L. Belotti Professor of Finance
Santa Clara University
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Something in Common
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Wherever Portfolios are
Managed
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Oversight
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Outline
1. Brain Circuitry, general issues
2. Psychology of risk
3. Implications for finance
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1. Brain Circuitry
& Genes
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Mischel
Marshmallow Experiment
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What Lights Up?
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2. Psychology of Risk
Kahneman-Tversky
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Emotions
SP/A Approach
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Robyn Dawes
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Amy Cuddy
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Hormones
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Circuitry
• Kuhnen and Knutson, Neuron, 2005
• Two key brain regions activated before
people make risky choices.
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NAcc & Anterior Insula
• fMRI of subjects.
• Nucleus accumbens activation
preceded choice of risky alternatives.
• Anterior insula activation preceded
choice of safe alternative.
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Emotional Circuitry
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Casinos
• Surround guests with inexpensive
food, free liquor, surprise gifts,
potential jackpot prizes.
• Anticipation of rewards activates the
NAcc, increasing likelihood of
individuals switching from riskaverse to risk-seeking behavior.
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3. Implications for Finance
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Lehman Fails
High Power or Low Power Pose?
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Testosterone & Cortisol
• Herbert and Coates.
• How do levels of testosterone and
cortisol change with a trader’s success
or failure?
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Findings
• Trader's morning testosterone level 
predict day's profitability.
• Cortisol did not rise when traders lost
money.
– Individuals not more cautious.
• Instead, trader's cortisol level rose with
both the variance of his trading results
and the volatility of the market.
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Hypothesis
• As volatility increases, hormones shift
risk preferences and can affect a
trader's ability to engage in rational
choice.
• Over a certain peak, testosterone
impairs the risk assessment of traders.
– Inverted U-shaped response curve.
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Male Competition
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Coates’s Thoughts
• If you keep winning …
• When that happens to animals …
• At the center of the market …
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Governance
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Conclusion
1. Brain Circuitry, general issues
2. Psychology of risk
3. Implications for governance in financial
services firms
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