It
is believed that an investor wants to make money out of investing in financial
assets. They tend to realize the goal of wealth maximization from their
investments. Their investment decision making is in line with the classic economic
theory of utility maximization. But what they fail to realize that they are
human being and are bound to make mistakes that might stray them from their
investment goals.
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Most
models in economics and finance assume that investors are completely rational
and that the market is efficient. With these two assumptions, one can develop
models that derive equilibrium prices of risky assets, the prices of a unit of
risk, the risk premium, the risk-return relationship and so on. Research in
applied finance and economics has provided enough evidence that the market is
inefficient and that investors are only “semi-rational”, while semi-rationality
means that that investors make systematic errors while making their investment
decisions. Given the certainty that investors make systematic errors, it seems
quite logical that wealth maximization is not the ultimate goal of investment
decision making. Following are the five reasons explaining their semi-rational
approach to investment decision making, leading to erroneous investment goal:
(i) Investors
ignore in their investment decision-making process the correlation of rates of
return on various assets. They don’t see the relationship between two or more
different assets return following a similar trend.
(ii) Decision
weights, w(p) – subjective probabilities
– are used instead of the true probabilities, p. Investors assign weights to past rates of return even though
such rates of return may be irrelevant. Thus, even when the investors are told
that the market is efficient and rates of return follow a random pattern, they
form their belief based on assets past return.
(iii) Investors
make investment decisions based on the change of wealth, x, rather than the total wealth, w+x, where w is the initial
wealth and x is the change in wealth.
They perceive each of their investment in the portfolio in relative terms,
rather than absolute terms. This approach gives them half the picture of their
investments, and they tend to make faulty investment decisions.
(iv) Individuals
in general and investors in particular have “mental department” – also known as
mental accounts – (i.e. they make
several accounts in their minds, which implies that the aggregate wealth
maximization is not the goal of their investment decision making.) Suppose an
investor has a portfolio of P0
value at time t0, where P0 consists of a certain portion of equity E0, and remaining as debt
instrument D0. Essentially,
P0=E0+D0.
If at time t1, the
portfolio becomes P1=E1+D1,
where P1>P0, E1<E0
and D1>D0. He fails to take into account the
overall increase in the value of the portfolio; instead he might get panic and
make a financial fatal decision.
(v) In a
nutshell, under certain conditions, investors’ deviation from rationality is
important in determining asset prices and market dynamics. Literature has
already provided sufficient evidence about this phenomenon of irrational or
semi-rational behavior of investors and its relationship with asset prices and returns.
There is ample support for this theory of investors being non-rational in
investment decision making.
2 Comments:
hello Abhijeet,
This is Supriya Maheshwari. I really liked your posts especially in the field of Behavioural Finance. Actually I am also looking forward in the same feild to pursue my research and i really liked your initiative in this feild..
Keep it up..
Thanks a lot, Supriya. I appreciate your interest and wish you all the best...
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