The relationship between the income and behavioural biases

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to test the relationship between the annual income earned by the investors and eight behavioural biases exhibited by the investors such as mental accounting, anchoring, gambler’s fallacy, availability, loss aversion, regret aversion, representativeness and ove...

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Main Authors: Renu Isidore R, Christie P
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of Economics Finance and Administrative Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/JEFAS-10-2018-0111
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spelling doaj-32f7a45ffa7d43a5a9c52514548f0b792020-11-25T02:04:48ZengEmerald PublishingJournal of Economics Finance and Administrative Science2077-18862019-06-01244712714410.1108/JEFAS-10-2018-0111623127The relationship between the income and behavioural biasesRenu Isidore R0Christie P1Loyola Institute of Business Administration, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaLoyola Institute of Business Administration, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaPurpose - The purpose of this paper is to test the relationship between the annual income earned by the investors and eight behavioural biases exhibited by the investors such as mental accounting, anchoring, gambler’s fallacy, availability, loss aversion, regret aversion, representativeness and overconfidence. Design/methodology/approach - The relationship is derived based on a questionnaire survey conducted on 436 secondary equity investors residing in Chennai, India. Findings - Analysis of variance test was performed on the normalised and non-normalised version of the biases divided in terms of the annual income earned by the investor. The test found that for the significant biases except the overconfidence bias, the investors with higher annual income were less prone to the biases when compared to investors with lower annual income. On the other hand, with respect to the overconfidence bias, the investors with higher annual income were prone to exhibit overconfidence bias when compared to the investors with lower annual income. Correlation analysis showed that the investors with high annual income were more likely to exhibit higher overconfidence bias but lower representativeness, loss aversion, availability and mental accounting biases. Originality/value - A contribution in the financial and economic front which would benefit the financial advisors to now consider the income earned by the clients as an important factor while giving financial advice to the clients and while guiding them about the biases they are prone to exhibit.https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/JEFAS-10-2018-0111Mental accountingAnchoringGambler’s fallacyAvailabilityLoss aversionRegret aversionRepresentativenessOverconfidence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renu Isidore R
Christie P
spellingShingle Renu Isidore R
Christie P
The relationship between the income and behavioural biases
Journal of Economics Finance and Administrative Science
Mental accounting
Anchoring
Gambler’s fallacy
Availability
Loss aversion
Regret aversion
Representativeness
Overconfidence
author_facet Renu Isidore R
Christie P
author_sort Renu Isidore R
title The relationship between the income and behavioural biases
title_short The relationship between the income and behavioural biases
title_full The relationship between the income and behavioural biases
title_fullStr The relationship between the income and behavioural biases
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between the income and behavioural biases
title_sort relationship between the income and behavioural biases
publisher Emerald Publishing
series Journal of Economics Finance and Administrative Science
issn 2077-1886
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to test the relationship between the annual income earned by the investors and eight behavioural biases exhibited by the investors such as mental accounting, anchoring, gambler’s fallacy, availability, loss aversion, regret aversion, representativeness and overconfidence. Design/methodology/approach - The relationship is derived based on a questionnaire survey conducted on 436 secondary equity investors residing in Chennai, India. Findings - Analysis of variance test was performed on the normalised and non-normalised version of the biases divided in terms of the annual income earned by the investor. The test found that for the significant biases except the overconfidence bias, the investors with higher annual income were less prone to the biases when compared to investors with lower annual income. On the other hand, with respect to the overconfidence bias, the investors with higher annual income were prone to exhibit overconfidence bias when compared to the investors with lower annual income. Correlation analysis showed that the investors with high annual income were more likely to exhibit higher overconfidence bias but lower representativeness, loss aversion, availability and mental accounting biases. Originality/value - A contribution in the financial and economic front which would benefit the financial advisors to now consider the income earned by the clients as an important factor while giving financial advice to the clients and while guiding them about the biases they are prone to exhibit.
topic Mental accounting
Anchoring
Gambler’s fallacy
Availability
Loss aversion
Regret aversion
Representativeness
Overconfidence
url https://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/JEFAS-10-2018-0111
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