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2026/2027  DIP-DHDVV2001U  Behavioural Finance

English Title
Behavioural Finance

Course information

Language English
Course ECTS 5 ECTS
Type Elective
Level Graduate Diploma
Duration One Semester
Start time of the course Autumn
Timetable Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk
Max. participants 50
Study board
Study Board for Graduate Diploma in Business Administration (part 2)
Programme Graduate Diploma in Business Administration (Finance)
Course coordinator
  • Jimmy Martinez-Correa - Department of Economics (ECON)
Study Administration for HD2 Finance: hdf@cbs.dk
Main academic disciplines
  • Finance
  • Consumer behaviour
  • Economics
Teaching methods
  • Face-to-face teaching
Last updated on 24-03-2026

Relevant links

Learning objectives
By the end of the course, students will be able to:
  • Diagnose behavioral biases in real-world decision-making, using evidence from observed behavior, communication, and context.
  • Apply behavioral and psychological concepts to financial decisions made by individuals, households, organizations, and markets.
  • Distinguish between rational and behavioral explanations of decisions under risk and uncertainty.
  • Analyze how beliefs, emotions, and social dynamics influence decisions, particularly in situations involving uncertainty and changing information.
  • Design actionable strategies to improve decision-making, both for themselves and for others (e.g., clients, colleagues, stakeholders).
Course prerequisites
The course requires basic knowledge of economic theory and financial markets.
Examination
Behavioural Finance:
Exam ECTS 5
Examination form Written sit-in exam on CBS' computers
Individual or group exam Individual exam
Assignment type Written assignment
Duration 4 hours
Grading scale 7-point grading scale
Examiner(s) One internal examiner
Exam period Winter
Aids Limited aids, see the list below:
The student is allowed to bring
  • USB key for uploading of notes, books and compendiums in a non-executable format (no applications, application fragments, IT tools etc.)
  • Any calculator
  • In Paper format: Books (including translation dictionaries), compendiums and notes
The student will have access to
  • Canvas
  • Basic IT application package
Make-up exam/re-exam Oral Exam
Duration: 20 min. per student, including examiners' discussion of grade, and informing plus explaining the grade
Preparation time: No preparation
Examiner(s): If it is an internal examination, there will be a second internal examiner at the re-exam. If it is an external examination, there will be an external examiner.
Description of the exam procedure

Re-exam:

 

Without exam aids.

 

One or more questions are drawn from key parts of the material and concepts covered in the course. The questions are answered using relevant illustrations, formulas, etc. The grade is determined on the basis of an overall assessment of the extent to which the answers meet the overall learning objectives.

Course content, structure and pedagogical approach

The teaching consists of 40 lessons, in lessons of either 4 or 2 hours. 

 

Financial decisions are among the most important and difficult decisions individuals and organizations face. Yet they are systematically affected by behavioral biases, especially in periods of uncertainty and market stress.

 

This course develops a structured approach to understanding and improving decision-making under uncertainty.

 

The course examines how individuals make decisions under risk and uncertainty, using financial contexts as a rich and realistic setting. Financial decisions, such as investing, saving, and reacting to market news, provide clear and measurable examples of how beliefs, emotions, and social influences shape behavior.

 

The course combines rigorous academic insights from behavioral economics, psychology, and finance with applied, real-world decision-making scenarios. Each case studied in the course is grounded in well-established theoretical frameworks and supported by empirical evidence from the academic literature.

 

While many examples are inspired by investor and advisory contexts, financial decision-making is used as a high-resolution lens to study general principles of human behavior. The insights are therefore broadly applicable across business, policy, and everyday decision-making. The course is particularly relevant for roles involving decision-making under uncertainty, including finance, consulting, management, and advisory contexts.

 

A central feature of the course is a set of realistic decision-making cases, which are used throughout the course to connect theory and practice. These cases reflect situations where decisions must be made under uncertainty, often with strong beliefs, conflicting objectives, and emotional reactions.

 

Examples of cases explored in the course include:

  • A high-net-worth individual with a strong belief in a single stock (e.g., Novo Nordisk), illustrating overconfidence, confirmation bias, and selective attention.

  • Investors who react strongly to short-term losses in liquid portfolios while ignoring larger long-term fluctuations, illustrating mental accounting and limited attention.

  • Investors shifting to assets such as gold in response to geopolitical uncertainty and media narratives.

  • ESG investing decisions where sustainability preferences, social norms, and narratives influence portfolio choices and perceived trade-offs between values and returns.

  • Household portfolio decisions where differences in income, risk preferences, and confidence affect outcomes.

 

Each case is explicitly linked to core theoretical models and empirical findings in the literature, and is used as a prototypical example of high-stakes decision-making under uncertainty.

 

By the end of the course, students will be able to apply a structured toolkit for analyzing and improving decisions under uncertainty. This includes identifying behavioral biases in practice, evaluating their impact on outcomes, and designing concrete strategies to improve decisions.

 

The course is structured around a consistent analytical approach to decision-making:

  1. Observation – What is happening in the decision situation?

  2. Diagnosis – Which behavioral mechanisms explain the observed behavior?

  3. Evaluation – How do these mechanisms affect decisions and outcomes?

  4. Implementation – What can be done to improve decisions, and how can it be effectively put into practice?

 

This framework is used throughout the course to analyze cases and develop practical decision-making skills.

 

Conceptual scope

 

The course integrates a coherent set of theoretical frameworks from:

  • Behavioral economics (heuristics and biases, prospect theory, intertemporal choice)

  • Psychology and cognitive science (attention, belief formation, judgment under uncertainty)

  • Finance (investor behavior, asset pricing anomalies, market dynamics)

  • Selected contributions from neuroscience (emotions and decision-making under risk)

 

These frameworks are used systematically to interpret behavior, structure decision problems, and design improved decision strategies.

 

These frameworks are introduced with a focus on intuition and practical relevance, rather than technical complexity. The emphasis is on understanding how the mechanisms work in real-world situations and how they can be applied to improve decisions.

 

The course emphasizes intuition, interpretation, and application, while maintaining a strong foundation in theory and rigorous empirical evidence.

 

Students participating in the course are expected to have a basic understanding of statistics and be able to make usual financial calculations such as present value calculations and expected values. Similarly, a general knowledge of financial markets, financial institutions and financial instruments such as options is assumed.

Research-based teaching
CBS’ programmes and teaching are research-based. The following types of research-based knowledge and research-like activities are included in this course:
Research-based knowledge
  • Classic and basic theory
  • New theory
  • Teacher’s own research
Research-like activities
  • Development of research questions
  • Discussion, critical reflection, modelling
  • Peer review including Peer-to-peer
Description of the teaching methods
Attendance lessons with online elements.

The course combines:
1) Research-based lectures introducing core theoretical frameworks
2) Structured case analysis applying theory to real-world scenarios
3) Guided discussions linking observed behavior to formal models and empirical evidence.
4) Students apply a structured analytical approach — observation, diagnosis, evaluation, and implementation — throughout the course in lectures, case discussions, and exercises.

The teaching is mainly in English. Active participation, experience sharing, and critical thinking are encouraged.
Feedback during the teaching period
Continuous feedback is a key component of the course.

Feedback is provided through:
1) Case discussions
2) Exam-type questions
3) In-class problem-solving
4) Student-initiated examples from real-life situations

Feedback focuses on:
1) Behavioral diagnosis
2) Theoretical grounding
3) Intervention design
4) Structured reasoning

Students are encouraged to connect course concepts to their own professional and personal experiences.
Student workload
30 scheduled lectures (attendance) + 10 lectures (Online: Pre-recorded or Online: Live). Minor changes in the number of attendance and online lectures can occur. 40 hours
Preparation (exam included) 97,5 hours
Further Information

Teaching days and times

 

  • Lecture (Attendance):
    • wednesday at 17:10-18:50 in week 35
    • wednesday at 17:10-20:40 in weeks 36, 38, 40, 44, 46, 48, 50
       
  • Onlineteaching (Online: Pre-recorded):
    • 10 lectures (not scheduled)

 

Changes may occur. 

Expected literature

The reading list is curated to focus on key contributions in behavioral finance. Emphasis is placed on understanding and applying core ideas rather than exhaustive coverage of the literature.

 

Page, Lionel, 2022, Optimally Irrational: The Good Reasons We Behave the Way We Do, MIT Press.

 

Shrefrin, Hersh, 2000, Beyond Greed and Fear: Understanding Behavioral Finance and the Psychology of Investing. Oxford University Press

 

Kahneman, Daniel, 2011, Thinking, Fast and Slow, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

 

Kahneman, Daniel, Sibony, Olivier, & Sunstein, Cass R, 2021, Noise: A Flaw in Human Judgment, New York: Little, Brown Spark.

 

Lo, Andrew W., 2019, Adaptive Markets: Financial Evolution at the Speed of Thought, Princeton University Press.

 

Additional course material

Instructor-developed case studies based on real-world decision-making situations form a central part of the course.

 

Other Recommended Books

 

These are books that are easy and fun to read. They provide a quick insight into how behavioral finance is being used in the real world. They are not part of the syllabus.

 

Akerlof, George A., and Robert J. Shiller, 2009, Animal Spirits: How Human Psychology Drives the Economy, and Why it Matters for Global Capitalism. Princeton University Press

 

Lewis, Michael, 2010, The Big Short: A True Story. W.W. Norton.

 

Thaler, Richard H., and Cass R. Sunstein, 2009, Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness. Yale University Press

 

Additional references:

 

A curated selection of academic papers covering behavioral biases, investor behavior, market anomalies, intertemporal choice and neuroeconomics.

 

 

Last updated on 24-03-2026