Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to analyse five biases in the valuation of financial investments using a mental time travel framework involving thought investments – with no objective time passing.Design/methodology/approachAn investment’s initial value, together with any periodic funding cash-flows, are mentally projected forward (at an expected rate of return) to give the value at the investment horizon; and this projected value is mentally discounted back to the present. If there is a difference between the initial and present values, then this can imply a bias in valuation.FindingsThe study identifies (and gives examples of) five real-world valuation biases: biased funding cash-flow estimates (e.g., mega infrastructure projects); biased rate of return projections (e.g., market crises, tech stock carve-outs); biased discount rate estimates (e.g., dual-listed shares, dual-class shares, short-termism, time-risk misperception, and long-termism); time-duration misestimation or perception bias when projecting (e.g., time-contracted projections which lead to short-termism); and time-duration misestimation or perception bias when discounting (e.g., time-extended discounting which also leads to short-termism). More than one bias can be operating at the same time and we give an example of low levels of retirement savings being the result of the biased discounting of biased projections. Finally, we consider the effects of the different biases of different agents operating simultaneously.Originality/valueThe paper examines key systematic misestimation and psychological biases underlying financial investment valuation pricing anomalies.
Reference54 articles.
1. The rise of dual-class stock IPOs;Journal of Financial Economics,2022
2. The case for dual-class of shares,2019
3. Long-term bias and director primacy;Columbia Business Law Review,2021
4. Long-term bias;Columbia Business Law Review,2020