Deeponomics

Deeponomics

Deeponomics is a podcast about the deep ideas shaping markets, finance, and accounting — grounded in academic research and critical thinking. Each episode draws from scholarly work to explore how investors make decisions, how narratives influence investments, and how theory connects to real-world finance. Expect conversations with researchers, deep dives into academic papers, and reflections on the stories behind the numbers.

  1. 12/19/2025

    #17 - Narrative Authority in Financial Markets

    Welcome, friend and future deep-dweller! In this episode of Deeponomics, I sit down with Stefan Leins, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Bern and author of Stories of Capitalism, to explore what actually happens inside a financial analyst department at a large Swizz bank. Based on a two-year ethnography, Leins takes us into the everyday world of buy-side financial analysts, a world far more narrative-driven than standard finance theory would ever admit. We talk about how analysts work under radical uncertainty, why narratives matters, and how wildly different strategies, from technical analysis to being inspired by astrology and Fibonacci, coexist under the same institutional roof. A central theme of the conversation is why financial analysts continue to exist despite decades of evidence that markets are difficult, if not impossible, to beat. Leins shows that the real product analysts deliver is not prediction accuracy, but compelling investment narratives that create orientation, agency, and legitimacy in an unknowable future. We dive deep into the idea of narrative authority, how analysts build credibility through narratives rather than prediction accuracy, how forecasts travel through the bank via client advisors and asset managers, and how responsibility for failure is continuously pushed around the organization. Along the way, we unpack how narratives differ from stories, why performativity only gets us part of the way, and what all of this means for investors, banks, and our understanding of expertise in finance. If you are interested in markets as cultural systems, in finance as a narrative practice, or in what really sustains belief in professional expertise under uncertainty, this episode is a must-listen. Click on his name to learn more about Stefan Leins and his work. — Find Us Deep Substack: deeponomics.substack.com Instagram: @deeponomics YouTube: @Deeponomics Website: deeponomics.com Email: ⁠⁠info@deeponomics.com

    57 min
  2. 11/20/2025

    #16 - The Social Studies of Finance

    Welcome, friend and future deep-dweller! In this episode of Deeponomics, I sit down with Yuval Millo, Professor of Accounting at Warwick Business School, to trace the intellectual journey behind the social studies of finance and what it means to take markets seriously as social and reflexive systems. Millo walks us through the early days of the field, including how his investigation into the Black–Scholes option pricing model led him to the idea of performativity and the insight that financial theories don’t just describe markets, they shape them. We dive into his recent work on financial analysts, investors, and the subtle social structures that create market inertia, from overconfidence born in tight networks to the stickiness of buy-side and sell-side relationships. We also explore his research on active fund managers, why so many still persist despite decades of underperformance, and what happens when the rise of passive investing becomes an epistemic threat to the identity of active professionals. Finally, we touch on his newer work on machine learning and credit modeling, where opaque systems risk creating self-referential loops that humans cannot easily escape or evaluate. If you’re curious about how markets actually work once you zoom in on the humans, tools, and stories that animate them, this conversation offers a rare inside view from someone who helped shape the field. Learn more about Yuval Millo: https://www.wbs.ac.uk/about/person/yuval-millo/ — Find Us Deep Substack: deeponomics.substack.com Instagram: @deeponomics YouTube: @Deeponomics Website: deeponomics.com Email: ⁠⁠info@deeponomics.com

    56 min
  3. 09/02/2025

    #14 - The Emergence of Investor Relations

    Welcome, friend and future deep-dweller! In this episode of Deeponomics, we sit down with Johan Graaf to learn about the emergence of the field of investor relations. Graaf, an Associate Professor at the Stockholm School of Economics, brings an interdisciplinary and ethnographic approach to the study of accounting as a social and institutional practice. His work explores how accounting shapes equity investment, the role of sell-side equity advisors, and the dynamics of rankings and performance management. We take a deep dive into his current research on Investor Relations in a Swedish context—examining why the profession emerged, what it actually entails, and why practitioners must master a diverse mix of communication, financial understanding, and institutional awareness. Drawing on qualitative, field-based methods, Graaf traces how IR officers navigate increasingly complex demands—from translating accounting and financial analysis into meaningful narratives, to responding to the shifting expectations of fund managers and other capital market actors. Learn more about Johan Graaf: https://www.hhs.se/en/persons/g/graaf-johan/ This episode is produced in cooperation with the Stockholm School of Economics podcast, Numbers Talk. It is a longer and less filtered version of that conversation. — Find Us Deep Substack: deeponomics.substack.com Instagram: @deeponomics YouTube: @Deeponomics Website: deeponomics.com Email: ⁠⁠info@deeponomics.com

    1h 4m
  4. 08/19/2025

    #13 - The Gap Between Modern Finance Theory and the Realities of Investing

    Welcome, friend and future deep-dweller! In this episode of Deeponomics, we sit down with Les Coleman to examine the widening gap between modern finance theory and the realities of investing. Coleman, a multidisciplinary researcher and long-time critic of conventional models, takes aim at the limitations of both neoclassical and behavioral finance. While behavioral finance may explain why investors act the way they do, Coleman argues it rarely offers guidance that actually improves decision-making. We explore his view of financial markets as complex closed loop systems—interconnected, adaptive, and inherently difficult to predict. From risk management to the underperformance of active fund managers, Coleman calls for a more grounded, multidisciplinary and applied approach to research. He also shares principles from his own approach to equity investment, including why naive extrapolation of recent data might be the only useful forecasting tool. In the end, Coleman’s message is one of humility: finance offers no certainties, investing is inherently challenging, but questioning assumptions, adapting to change, and drawing on multiple disciplines can improve our approach. Learn more about Les Coleman: https://findanexpert.unimelb.edu.au/profile/75699-les-coleman — Find Us Deep Substack: deeponomics.substack.com Instagram: @deeponomics YouTube: @Deeponomics Website: deeponomics.com Email: ⁠⁠info@deeponomics.com

    47 min

Trailers

About

Deeponomics is a podcast about the deep ideas shaping markets, finance, and accounting — grounded in academic research and critical thinking. Each episode draws from scholarly work to explore how investors make decisions, how narratives influence investments, and how theory connects to real-world finance. Expect conversations with researchers, deep dives into academic papers, and reflections on the stories behind the numbers.