The Apple Is On A Roll

Anybody who doesn’t know about iPhone, iPad, or iPod? It seems the California-based company is enjoying the best time of its life, or maybe times are getting even better in the months and years to come. After good quarterly figures, the company looks as strong as never before. Where is the company today in the hit list of the most expensive enterprises in the world? Will its share price rise and reach out to the moon? Continue reading

Biases Part II: What Corporations Can Learn From Behavioural Finance

On Dec 19, 2011, I wrote about this topic. Here is a follow up on this matter. Our goal is to look into the toolbox of Behavioural Finance, understand the biases they talk about, carry the toolbox from its place in finance into the world of corporations and enterprises, and see what the key bits mean in that every-day context. Continue reading

What corporations can learn from behavioural finance

Behavioural finance, as a complement to traditional finance has long been trying to understand how people make decisions. This with the goal to eventually help investors improve their economic results, speak make their portfolios more efficient in the sense of modern portfolio theory (or put simply, make more money for given risk). The discipline, borrowing from psychology, has uncovered numerous biases that distort people’s decision making, typically to their detriment. Now then, there are lots of fruits to harvest from those studies, not only for professional investors and traders, but equally for the Sunday afternoon private want-to-be stock market player or the corporate citizen involved in day-to-day projects in their company. Continue reading

Making investments – what to look out for!

When investing in shares of publicly traded companies, investors (specifically private ones) can do at least the following: make a bet, ask for a hot tip of a friend, ask a financial adviser, pull a well-remembered company name out of their memory, consult an investment magazine, or do some homework and study the fundamentals of the companies. Investors beware: Even fundamentals can be highly misleading. Continue reading