Barry Ritholtz, Columnist

A Challenge to the Biggest Idea in Behavioral Finance

Two professors make an interesting argument, but the theory of loss aversion isn’t dead yet.

That sure hurt.

Photographer: Thierry Esch/Paris Match Archive/Getty Images
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A recent paper summarized in Scientific American raises an intriguing question: Is one of the founding theories of behavioral finance known as loss aversion -- the idea that people place more weight on avoiding losses than gains -- correct?

In the magazine, one of the study's authors, David Gal of the University of Illinois - Chicago, writes: