💰Psychology of Economic Decision-Making Unit 9 – Investor Psychology in Behavioral Finance
Investor psychology in behavioral finance explores how cognitive biases and emotions influence financial decisions. It examines why people often make irrational choices, deviating from traditional economic theories of rational behavior. This field combines insights from psychology and economics to explain market anomalies.
Key concepts include prospect theory, mental accounting, and various cognitive biases like anchoring and overconfidence. Understanding these psychological factors can help investors recognize their own biases and develop strategies to make more rational, disciplined investment decisions.
Behavioral finance combines psychological theory with conventional economics to provide explanations for why people make irrational financial decisions
Prospect theory suggests people make decisions based on the potential value of losses and gains rather than the final outcome (Kahneman and Tversky)
Mental accounting refers to the tendency for people to separate their money into separate accounts based on subjective criteria (such as the source or intended use of the funds)
Leads to irrational spending and investment behaviors
Anchoring involves relying too heavily on an initial piece of information when making decisions
Investors may anchor to the price at which they purchased a stock and resist selling it even if new information suggests the stock is overvalued
Overconfidence bias causes investors to overestimate their skills, knowledge, and ability to predict market movements
Confirmation bias leads investors to seek out information that confirms their existing beliefs while ignoring contrary information
Herding behavior occurs when investors follow the actions of a larger group, even if they disagree with the group's decisions
Cognitive Biases in Investing
Representativeness bias involves making judgments based on stereotypes rather than objective analysis
Investors may assume a company with strong past performance will continue to do well, ignoring other relevant factors
Availability bias causes investors to overweight recent events or information that is readily available to them
Hindsight bias leads investors to believe past events were more predictable than they actually were
Can cause overconfidence in future investment decisions
Illusion of control bias occurs when investors overestimate their ability to control or influence investment outcomes
Self-attribution bias causes investors to attribute successful outcomes to their own skill while blaming failures on external factors
Conservatism bias leads investors to insufficiently incorporate new information into their existing beliefs
Results in slow updating of opinions in the face of new evidence
Disposition effect refers to the tendency for investors to sell winning investments too soon while holding onto losing investments for too long