Encourages deep understanding and curiosity.
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Professor Robert Durand serves as Professor of Finance in the School of Accounting, Economics and Finance within Curtin Business School at Curtin University, a position to which he was appointed in 2011. He earned a BA (Hons) from the University of Sydney, an MBA from the University of Edinburgh, and a PhD from Murdoch University. Durand's research centers on empirical investigations of asset pricing models and behavioural finance, examining how psychological factors, personality traits, and investor sentiment shape financial decisions and market dynamics. His work has illuminated phenomena such as overconfidence in trading, the impact of fear on factor returns, and the role of morality in investment performance.
Durand's prolific publication record includes highly influential papers such as 'An intimate portrait of the individual investor' (The Journal of Behavioral Finance, 2008), 'Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Profiles, Stock Returns, and Financial Policy: Australian Evidence' (International Review of Finance, 2017), 'Financial distress: Lifecycle and corporate restructuring' (Journal of Corporate Finance, 2015), 'The value relevance and reliability of reported goodwill and identifiable intangible assets' (The British Accounting Review, 2009), and 'Overconfidence, overreaction and personality' (Review of Behavioral Finance, 2013). Additional key contributions encompass 'Fear and the Fama-French Factors' (Financial Management, 2011), 'Saints versus Sinners. Does Morality Matter?' (Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money, 2013), and 'The Price of Sin in the Pacific-Basin' (Pacific-Basin Finance Journal, 2012). He holds positions on the editorial board of the Global Finance Journal, specializing in behavioural finance and empirical asset pricing, and serves as a Director on the board of the Financial Institutions, Regulation and Applications Research Network (FIRN). Durand has delivered keynote addresses at international conferences, supervised numerous PhD students to completion, and contributed expert commentary on topics including investor behaviour during market stress and the influence of personality on portfolio choices. His scholarship has advanced the understanding of behavioural anomalies in asset pricing and informed policy discussions on financial markets.
