Dr. Hersh Shefrin

Mario Belotti Professor of Finance

408.554.6893 or hshefrin@scu.edu

 

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  Hersh's book, A Behavioral Approach to Asset Pricing is now available. It can be purchased directly through Elsevier online. Click on image for updates and corrections. Comments welcome.

 

Hersh Shefrin, who holds the Mario L. Belotti Chair in the Department of Finance at the Leavey School of Business, is one of the pioneers of behavioral finance. He has published widely in the area and writes for both academics and practitioners. Professor Shefrin regularly teaches a graduate course in behavioral finance and often speaks on the subject to portfolio managers, security analysts, and financial planners both in the U.S. and abroad. He is frequently interviewed by the media on financial matters.

In 1999, his book, Beyond Greed and Fear: Understanding Behavioral Finance and the Psychology of Investing, was published by Harvard Business School Press. This is the first comprehensive treatment of behavioral finance written specifically for practitioners. In 2002, Oxford University Press, who assumed publication of the book, released an edition with a revised preface to reflect recent events and developments. Beginning in 2003, McGraw-Hill Irwin will package Beyond Greed and Fear together with the book Investments by Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane, and Alan Marcus.

In 2001, Professor Shefrin edited a three-volume collection, entitled Behavioral Finance, published by Edward Elgar. In addition to seminal papers in this rapidly developing field, these volumes contain some of the pioneering works in psychology, upon which behavioral finance is based.

Professor Shefrin's scholarly articles have appeared in the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics, the Review of Financial Studies, the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Financial Management, the Financial Analysts Journal, and the Journal of Portfolio Management.

Professor Shefrin completed his PhD at the London School of Economics in the economics of uncertainty; he earned a Master of Mathematics from the University of Waterloo and a BS (Honors) in economics and mathematics from the University of Manitoba.

 

 

 

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