1.
Anonymous. Methods for all moments; Free exchange. The Economist 409,.
2.
Hilsenrath, Jon E. Stock Characters: As Two Economists Debate Markets, The Tide Shifts; Belief in Efficient Valuation Yields Ground to Role Of Irrational Investors; Mr. Thaler Takes On Mr. Fama. Wall Street Journal.
3.
Thaler, R. H. Financial Literacy, Beyond the Classroom. New York Times (2013).
4.
Lusardi, A. & Mitchell, O. The Economic Importance of Financial Literacy: Theory and Evidence. Journal of Economic Literature 52, 5–44 (2014).
5.
Colvin, G. Time Warner, Don’t Blame Steve Case. Fortune 147, 35–35 (2003).
6.
Special Report: The avuncular state - The new paternalism. The Economist 379,.
7.
Cronqvist, H. & Thaler, R. H. Design Choices in Privatized Social-Security Systems: Learning from the Swedish Experience. The American Economic Review 94, 424–428 (2004).
8.
Sommer, J. How Men’s Overconfidence Hurts Them as Investors. New York Times (2010).
9.
Barber, B. M. & Odean, T. The Courage of Misguided Convictions. Financial Analysts Journal 55, 41–55 (1999).
10.
List, J. Resist Checking Up on Your Portfolio. New York Times 1–2 (2016).
11.
Genesove, D. & Mayer, C. Loss Aversion and Seller Behavior: Evidence from the Housing Market. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 116, 1233–1260 (2001).
12.
DellaVigna, S. & Pollet, J. M. Investor Inattention and Friday Earnings Announcements. The Journal of Finance 64, 709–749 (2009).
13.
Stokes, H. Using Behavioral Finance to Better Understand the Psychology of Investors. Institutional Investor.
14.
Frazzini, A. The Disposition Effect and Underreaction to News. The Journal of Finance 61, 2017–2046 (2006).
15.
Lamont, O. A. & Thaler, R. H. Anomalies: The Law of One Price in Financial Markets. The Journal of Economic Perspectives 17, 191–202 (2003).
16.
Finance And Economics: Don’t shoot the messenger; Short-selling. The Economist 366, 66–67.
17.
Lamont, O. Go Down Fighting: Short Sellers vs. Firms. NBER Working Paper Series (2004).
18.
Colvin, G. Time Warner, Don’t Blame Steve Case. Fortune 147, 35–35 (2003).
19.
Cooper, M. J., Dimitrov, O. & Rau, P. R. A Rose.com by Any Other Name. The Journal of Finance 56, 2371–2388 (2001).
20.
Ofek, E. & Richardson, M. DotCom Mania: The Rise and Fall of Internet Stock Prices. The Journal of Finance 58, 1113–1137 (2003).
21.
Shiller, R. J. Do Stock Prices Move Too Much to be Justified by Subsequent Changes in Dividends? The American Economic Review 71, 421–436 (1981).
22.
Roll, R. Orange Juice and Weather. The American Economic Review 74, 861–880 (1984).
23.
Barber, B. M., Lee, Y.-T., Liu, Y.-J. & Odean, T. Just How Much Do Individual Investors Lose by Trading? Review of Financial Studies. Feb 22, 609–632 (2009).
24.
Choi, J. J., Laibson, D. & Madrian, B. . Why Does the Law of One Price Fail? An Experiment on Index Mutual Funds. Review of Financial Studies. Apr 23, 1405–1432 (2010).
25.
Benartzi, S. & Thaler, R. H. Heuristics and Biases in Retirement Savings Behavior. Journal of Economic Perspectives. Summer 21, 81–104 (2007).
26.
Barber, B. M. B. & Odean, T. Boys Will be Boys: Gender, Overconfidence, and Common Stock Investment. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 116, 261–292 (2001).
27.
Grinblatt, M. & Keloharju, M. Sensation Seeking, Overconfidence, and Trading Activity. The Journal of Finance 64, 549–578 (2009).
28.
MALMENDIER, U. & TATE, G. Who makes acquisitions? CEO overconfidence and the market’s reaction. Journal of Financial Economics 89, 20–43 (2008).
29.
Barberis, N. Psychology and the Financial Crisis of 2007-2008. in Financial innovation: too much or too little? (MIT Press, 2013).
30.
Odean, T. Are Investors Reluctant to Realize Their Losses? The Journal of Finance 53, 1775–1798 (1998).
31.
Coval, J. D. & Shumway, T. Do Behavioral Biases Affect Prices? The Journal of Finance 60, 1–34 (2005).
32.
Grinblatt, M. & Keloharju, M. How Distance, Language, and Culture Influence Stockholdings and Trades. The Journal of Finance 56, 1053–1073 (2001).
33.
Cohen, L. & Frazzini, A. Economic Links and Predictable Returns. The Journal of Finance 63, 1977–2011 (2008).
34.
Cohen, L. & Lou, D. Complicated firms. Journal of Financial Economics 104, 383–400 (2012).
35.
Bali, T. G., Cakici, N. & Whitelaw, R. F. Maxing out: Stocks as lotteries and the cross-section of expected returns. Journal of Financial Economics 99, 427–446 (2011).
36.
Bradley, M., Brav, A., Goldstein, I. & Jiang, W. Activist arbitrage: A study of open-ending attempts of closed-end funds. Journal of Financial Economics 95, 1–19 (2010).
37.
Wurgler, J. & Zhuravskaya, E. Does Arbitrage Flatten Demand Curves for Stocks? The Journal of Business 75, 583–608 (2002).
38.
Mitchell, M., Pulvino, T. P. and E. S. & Stafford, E. Limited Arbitrage in Equity Markets. The Journal of Finance 57, 551–584 (2002).
39.
K. BRUNNERMEIER, M. & NAGEL, S. Hedge Funds and the Technology Bubble. The Journal of Finance 59, 2013–2040 (2004).
40.
D’Avolio, G. The market for borrowing stock. Journal of Financial Economics 66, 271–306 (2002).
41.
Diether, K. B., Malloy, C. J. & Scherbina, A. Differences of Opinion and the Cross Section of Stock Returns. The Journal of Finance 57, 2113–2141 (2002).
42.
Jones, C. M. & Lamont, O. A. Short-sale constraints and stock returns. Journal of Financial Economics 66, 207–239 (2002).
43.
Baker, M. & Wurgler, J. The Equity Share in New Issues and Aggregate Stock Returns. Journal of Finance. Oct 55, 2219–2257 (2000).
44.
Baker, M. & Wurgler, J. A Catering Theory of Dividends. The Journal of Finance 59, 1125–1165 (2004).
45.
Baker, M., Ruback, R. & Wurgler, J. Behavioral corporate finance. in Handbook of corporate finance: empirical corporate finance, Vol. 1 145–186 (Elsevier, 2007).