{"title":"人人都想投资,唯恐错过 (FOMO):自营职业者与工薪投资者的比较研究","authors":"Jitender Kumar, Manju Rani, Garima Rani, Vinki Rani","doi":"10.1108/jfrc-01-2024-0010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<h3>Purpose</h3>\n<p>This paper aims to examine how fear of missing out (FOMO) and investment intention mediate the relationship between behavioral biases and investment decisions of retail investors in the Indian stock market.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->\n<h3>Design/methodology/approach</h3>\n<p>The present research comprises two cross-sectional quantitative studies, where Study A involves data from 405 self-employed and Study B involves 393 salaried investors. Data was attained through questionnaires – the partial least squares structural equation modeling was used for data analysis.</p><!--/ Abstract__block -->\n<h3>Findings</h3>\n<p>The outcomes show that herding, overconfidence and loss aversion bias significantly impact investment intention and FOMO on both studies. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
设计/方法/途径本研究包括两项横截面定量研究,研究 A 涉及 405 名自营职业者的数据,研究 B 涉及 393 名受薪投资者的数据。研究结果表明,羊群效应、过度自信和损失规避偏差对两项研究中的投资意向和 FOMO 均有显著影响。此外,研究结果还表明,羊群效应和损失规避偏差对研究(A 和 B)中的投资决策有重大影响;然而,过度自信偏差对研究 A 中的投资决策影响不大。本文的研究结果有助于从业人员(金融分析师和散户投资者)通过考虑几种偏差的共同影响来考虑分析投资决策结果的各种方法。 原创性/价值 本文首次尝试提出一个新的理论框架,并通过考虑自雇和受薪投资者的 FOMO 和投资意向来实证检验行为偏差对投资决策的影响。本研究也为行为金融学文献做出了贡献;其他研究人员可能会发现本研究对实现他们的目标很有价值。
All are interesting to invest, I fear of missing out (FOMO): a comparative study among self-employed and salaried investors
Purpose
This paper aims to examine how fear of missing out (FOMO) and investment intention mediate the relationship between behavioral biases and investment decisions of retail investors in the Indian stock market.
Design/methodology/approach
The present research comprises two cross-sectional quantitative studies, where Study A involves data from 405 self-employed and Study B involves 393 salaried investors. Data was attained through questionnaires – the partial least squares structural equation modeling was used for data analysis.
Findings
The outcomes show that herding, overconfidence and loss aversion bias significantly impact investment intention and FOMO on both studies. Furthermore, the outcomes also indicate that herding and loss aversion bias significantly influence investment decisions in studies (A and B); however, overconfidence bias insignificantly affects the investment decisions in Study A. Besides, the results also reveal a substantial relationship between FOMO, investment intention and investment decision.
Practical implications
The findings of this paper assist practitioners (financial analysts and retail investors) in considering the various ways of analyzing investment decision outcomes by considering the joint effect of several biases.
Originality/value
This paper is an initial attempt to propose a new theoretical framework and empirically examine the impact of behavioral biases on investment decisions by considering the FOMO and investment intention among self-employed and salaried investors. This study also contributes to the behavioral finance literature; other researchers may find it valuable to attain their goals.
期刊介绍:
Since its inception in 1992, the Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance has provided an authoritative and scholarly platform for international research in financial regulation and compliance. The journal is at the intersection between academic research and the practice of financial regulation, with distinguished past authors including senior regulators, central bankers and even a Prime Minister. Financial crises, predatory practices, internationalization and integration, the increased use of technology and financial innovation are just some of the changes and issues that contemporary financial regulators are grappling with. These challenges and changes hold profound implications for regulation and compliance, ranging from macro-prudential to consumer protection policies. The journal seeks to illuminate these issues, is pluralistic in approach and invites scholarly papers using any appropriate methodology. Accordingly, the journal welcomes submissions from finance, law, economics and interdisciplinary perspectives. A broad spectrum of research styles, sources of information and topics (e.g. banking laws and regulations, stock market and cross border regulation, risk assessment and management, training and competence, competition law, case law, compliance and regulatory updates and guidelines) are appropriate. All submissions are double-blind refereed and judged on academic rigour, originality, quality of exposition and relevance to policy and practice. Once accepted, individual articles are typeset, proofed and published online as the Version of Record within an average of 32 days, so that articles can be downloaded and cited earlier.