From behavioural to emotional corporate finance: a new research direction
Richard John Fairchild
International Journal of Behavioural Accounting and Finance, 2012, vol. 3, issue 3/4, 221-243
Abstract:
Behavioural finance and behavioural corporate finance analyses the effects of psychological biases, heuristics, and emotions on investors' and managers' decision-making and performance. Taffler and Tuckett (2005) have introduced a major paradigm shift by introducing a new field of research, namely emotional finance. This ground-breaking approach employs Freud's theory of phantastic objects to analyse the effect of unconscious, infantile, emotions on investors' decisions. In this paper, we extend their work by proposing a new development, namely, emotional corporate finance. We argue that, just as investors may view investments as phantastic objects, managers may view their projects similarly. We develop a formal approach that considers the effects of managerial phantasy on the investment appraisal decision, project performance, and managerial entrapment in a losing project. Our main results are as follows: 1) managerial project-phantasy may induce a manager to mistakenly invest in value-reducing projects; b) phantasy may lead to volatility of managerial emotions, and hence volatility of project performance; c) phantasy may lead to project entrapment, but may result in project abandonment if the manager's project-phantasy turns to project hatred. We conclude by considering whether managerial phantasy could explain management's entrapment in the Concorde project.
Keywords: emotional finance; unconscious emotions; Freudian psychoanalysis; managerial phantasy; managerial emotions; project volatility; project entrapment; behavioural finance; Freud; theory of phantastic objects; investment appraisal decisions; project performance; management entrapment; Concorde project. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ids:ijbeaf:v:3:y:2012:i:3/4:p:221-243
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