Introduction
Behavioral finance studies the effect of psychological factors on human behavior, which further affects asset price movements. Standard financial models assume that individuals are rational and risk-averse. In reality, individuals may be however irrational and risk-seeking. Investors could be risk-averse or risk-seeking. Behavioral finance models do not adhere to the traditional assumptions of rationality and risk aversion but investigate how irrationality and behavioral bias affect our decisions. Basic behavioral finance concepts are briefly summarized below (Hon et al., 2021).
The Prospect Theory
Mental accounting
Regret aversion
If information about the best course of action under 7uncertainty arrives after taking a fixed decision, the negative human emotion of regret is often experienced. Regret is the pain that people feel when they consider themselves better off if they had not taken a certain action in the past. The value of regret can be measured as the difference between a made decision and the optimal one. The theory of regret proposes that when facing a decision in an uncertain environment, regret-averse individuals incorporate the possibility of regret in their decision-making process to avoid its occurrence. Regret aversion can be used to explain many economic theories, for example, the optimal output of a competitive firm (Egozcue, Guo, and Wong 2015).
Disposition effect
Cognitive dissonance
Cognitive dissonance is the perception of the contradictory information and relevant information items including people’s actions, feelings, ideas, beliefs, values, and things in the environment. Hence, cognitive dissonance is a mental conflict that people experience when presented with evidence that their beliefs, values, or assumptions are wrong. Cognitive dissonance is then classified as the pain of regret over erroneous beliefs. The theory of cognitive dissonance asserts that people tend to reduce cognitive dissonance. For instance, they may avoid new information or develop contorted arguments to maintain their beliefs or assumptions. Also, investors avoid negative information about a stock they purchased and focus on its positive news only.
Disappointment theory
Availability heuristic
Representative heuristic
Anchoring and adjustment
Ambiguity aversion
Overconfidence
Time preference and self-control
Herd effect
Ostrich effect
Endowment effect
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