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The psychology of investment behavior: : (De)biasing financial decision-making one graph at a time

  • Autores: Rod Duclos
  • Localización: Journal of Consumer Psychology, ISSN-e 1057-7408, Vol. 25, Nº. 2, 2015, págs. 317-325
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Consumers' welfare largely depends on the soundness of their financial decisions. To this effect, the present research examines how people process graphical displays of financial information (e.g., stock-prices) to forecast future trends and invest accordingly. In essence, we ask whether and how visual biases in data interpretation impact financial decision-making and risk-taking. Five experiments find that the last trading day(s) of a stock bear a disproportionately (and unduly) high importance on investment behavior, a phenomenon we coin end-anchoring. Specifically, a stock-price closing upward (downward) fosters upward (downward) forecasts for tomorrow and, accordingly, more (less) investing in the present. Substantial investment asymmetries (up to 75%) emerge even as stock-price distributions were generated randomly to simulate times when the market conjuncture is hesitant and no real upward or downward trend can be identified. Allying experimental manipulations to eye-tracking technology, the present research begins to explore the underpinnings of end-anchoring.


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