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Showing 41 to 50 of 310 search results for extent that Occasional Papers.
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Occasional Paper No. 32: Now you see it: drawing attention to charges in the asset management industry
As part of the Asset Management Market Study, the FCA wanted to understand the impact of different ways of presenting charges on investors’ decision-making and their understanding and awareness of charges. -
Occasional Paper No. 16: Are high-frequency traders anticipating the order flow? Cross-venue evidence from the UK market
Cross-venue evidence from the UK market. Occasional papers First published:. 15/04/2016. ... To the extent that Occasional Papers contain any errors or omissions, they should be attributed to the individual authors, rather than to the FCA. -
Occasional Paper No. 41: Price discrimination in the cash savings market: One rate, one solution?
The Cash Savings Market Study found that the cash savings market is not working effectively for many consumers. Significant amounts of easy access cash savings sit in accounts that were opened a long time ago, earning lower interest rates than those -
Occasional Paper No. 47: Blackbird’s alarm call or nightingale’s lullaby? The effect of tweet risk warnings on attractiveness, search, and understanding
We present the results of a series of experiments to investigate the effects of risk warnings in social media adverts on attractiveness, search and understanding. -
Occasional Paper No. 36: Sending out an SMS: The impact of automatically enrolling consumers into overdraft alerts
As part of the high-cost credit review, the FCA wanted to understand the impact of auto enrolling customers into overdraft and unpaid item (retry) alerts on customer overdrafting behaviour. -
Occasional Paper No. 44: The conflict between consumer intentions, beliefs and actions to pay down credit card debt
In this study we attempt to increase credit card payments through behaviourally-informed disclosures tested in experiments across 3 UK lenders. -
Creating and sustaining cultures of compliance: insights from psychology and beyond
But as today’s occasional paper on ‘behaviour and compliance in organisations’ spells out, without an understanding of the social, psychological and other influences on decision making in any given organisation, ... As seen in the LIBOR scandal, -
Occasional Paper No. 49: Borrower subgroups and the path into distress: commonalities and differences
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Occasional Paper No. 51: Using online experiments for behaviourally informed consumer policy
Consumer policy is informed by human behaviour but how do we measure this in a cost effective and relevant way? Online experiments help us focus our policy making decisions to act in consumers interests. -
Occasional Paper No. 9: Two plus two makes five? Survey evidence that investors overvalue structured deposits
Occasional Paper No. 9: Two plus two makes five? Survey evidence that investors overvalue structured deposits. ... Occasional papers First published:. 05/03/2015. Last updated: 05/03/2015.