Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective

This study has two research objectives: (1) to find evidence whether investment decisions (allocation of funds in each asset in a portfolio) of Indonesian investors in the short investment horizon diverge with their investment decisions in the long investment horizon, and (2) to examine the belief o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eddy Junarsin, Eduardus Tandelilin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2008-01-01
Series:Gadjah Mada International Journal of Business
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/gamaijb/article/view/5587
id doaj-a282128e1801443092d764bf9d25eb13
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a282128e1801443092d764bf9d25eb132020-11-25T00:29:58ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaGadjah Mada International Journal of Business1411-11282338-72382008-01-011017711210.22146/gamaijb.55874913Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian PerspectiveEddy Junarsin0Eduardus Tandelilin1Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Gadjah Mada, YogyakartaFaculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Gadjah Mada, YogyakartaThis study has two research objectives: (1) to find evidence whether investment decisions (allocation of funds in each asset in a portfolio) of Indonesian investors in the short investment horizon diverge with their investment decisions in the long investment horizon, and (2) to examine the belief of Indonesian investors in the mean reversion. This study analyzes the investment horizon from a behavioral point of view by examining the influence of investment horizon on investment decision and mean reversion in Indonesia. We employed the students of Master of Science, Master of Management, and Doctorate Programs at the Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia as the sample in this research. Of the 217 questionnaires delivered, 172 questionnaires were completely filled and utilized in this study. The main findings of this study are as follows: (1) it is significantly proved that Indonesian investors are inclined to assume higher portfolio risk in the longer investment horizon than that in the shorter investment horizon; (2) it is very interesting to see that on average, the investors are inclined to increase their allocation in the risk-free asset in the longer investment horizon although the difference between the risk-free asset holding in the short investment horizon and that in the long investment horizon is not significant; (3) the framing effect significantly influences the investment decisions, both in short investment horizon and in long investment horizon; (4) there is a tendency for the respondents to show a willingness to assume higher portfolio risk when they received the questionnaires that provided the historical five-year returns on the first page; (5) investors predict an asset gaining 50 percent in the first year to continuously gain in the next four years while expecting an asset losing 25 percent in the first year to continuously loss in the next four years.https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/gamaijb/article/view/5587investment horizoninvestment decisionmean reversion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eddy Junarsin
Eduardus Tandelilin
spellingShingle Eddy Junarsin
Eduardus Tandelilin
Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective
Gadjah Mada International Journal of Business
investment horizon
investment decision
mean reversion
author_facet Eddy Junarsin
Eduardus Tandelilin
author_sort Eddy Junarsin
title Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective
title_short Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective
title_full Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective
title_fullStr Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Investment Horizon to Investment Decision and Mean Reversion: Indonesian Perspective
title_sort investment horizon to investment decision and mean reversion: indonesian perspective
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Gadjah Mada International Journal of Business
issn 1411-1128
2338-7238
publishDate 2008-01-01
description This study has two research objectives: (1) to find evidence whether investment decisions (allocation of funds in each asset in a portfolio) of Indonesian investors in the short investment horizon diverge with their investment decisions in the long investment horizon, and (2) to examine the belief of Indonesian investors in the mean reversion. This study analyzes the investment horizon from a behavioral point of view by examining the influence of investment horizon on investment decision and mean reversion in Indonesia. We employed the students of Master of Science, Master of Management, and Doctorate Programs at the Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia as the sample in this research. Of the 217 questionnaires delivered, 172 questionnaires were completely filled and utilized in this study. The main findings of this study are as follows: (1) it is significantly proved that Indonesian investors are inclined to assume higher portfolio risk in the longer investment horizon than that in the shorter investment horizon; (2) it is very interesting to see that on average, the investors are inclined to increase their allocation in the risk-free asset in the longer investment horizon although the difference between the risk-free asset holding in the short investment horizon and that in the long investment horizon is not significant; (3) the framing effect significantly influences the investment decisions, both in short investment horizon and in long investment horizon; (4) there is a tendency for the respondents to show a willingness to assume higher portfolio risk when they received the questionnaires that provided the historical five-year returns on the first page; (5) investors predict an asset gaining 50 percent in the first year to continuously gain in the next four years while expecting an asset losing 25 percent in the first year to continuously loss in the next four years.
topic investment horizon
investment decision
mean reversion
url https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/gamaijb/article/view/5587
work_keys_str_mv AT eddyjunarsin investmenthorizontoinvestmentdecisionandmeanreversionindonesianperspective
AT eduardustandelilin investmenthorizontoinvestmentdecisionandmeanreversionindonesianperspective
_version_ 1725328722744049664