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Should investments professors join the “crowd”

Frank R. Flanegin (Robert Morris University)
Denis P. Rudd (Robert Morris University)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 1 May 2005

1692

Abstract

Just like the market which has its bulls and its bears, investments has its fundamentalists crowd and its technicians crowd. The academic finance profession must wake up and realize that investing is no longer driven solely by fundamental and statistical analysis. While as a profession we believe in and teach the fundamental investment subjects such as CAPM or EMH, we also realize the need to examine ways to explain the 80 per cent of the variability of stock returns not explained by the fundamentals. In addition to the fundamental investment subjects an increased exposure to both behavioral finance and the psychology of financial markets is absolutely necessary to increase the understanding of how and why stocks move. Just as the bulls need the bears, fundamentalists need technicians. Behavioral finance, crowd psychology, and the psychology of financial markets are the underpinnings of technical analysis. Western technical analysis predates CAPM and EMH by decades, if not more, tracing its roots back to Charles Dow founder of Dow Jones.

Keywords

Citation

Flanegin, F.R. and Rudd, D.P. (2005), "Should investments professors join the “crowd”", Managerial Finance, Vol. 31 No. 5, pp. 28-37. https://doi.org/10.1108/03074350510769659

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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