Behavioral Finance Definitions
Behavioral Finance Definitions
Behavioral Finance Definitions
Behavioral Finance, a study of investor market behavior that derives from psychological principles of decision making, to explain why people buy or sell the stocks they do. The linkage of behavioral cognitive psychology, which studies human decision making, and financial market economics. Behavioral Finance focuses upon how investors interpret and act on information to make informed investment decisions. Investors do not always behave in a rational, predictable and an unbiased manner indicated by the quantitative models. Behavioral finance places an emphasis upon investor behavior leading to various market anomalies.
Study suggests that investors cause market prices to deviate from fundamental values creating inefficient markets: due to representativeness heuristic markets treatment of past winners and losers is not efficient.
More Critics
Two alternative Hypotheses: to overreaction. 1. Risk Change Hypothesis: overreaction is rational response to risk changes (short term earnings outlook changes) as measured by Betas 2. Firm size: past loser portfolio made up of small firms Disturbing factors 1. Seasonal pattern of returns (January turn of the year effect) 2. The characteristics of the firms in the portfolios (Small size) 3. Co-relation is asymmetric De Bondt and Thalers response The data do not support either of these explanations. It is emotional shifts in mood of investorsbiased expectations of the future, not rational shifts in economic conditions see also, 1990 paper: Do Security Analysts Overreact? yes
Grinblatt and Titman 1989, 1991 relative strength strategies: they showed a tendency to buy stocks that have increased in price over the previous quarter, based on past relative strength
Integrating results
Contrarian strategies work with 1. Very short periods (one week, one month) 2. Very long periods (3 to 5 years) Growth (relative strength strategies) work with three to 12 months Jegadeesh and Titman (1993) studied period 1965-89 found:
three to 12 months earned average of 9.5% (six months earned 12%) then reversals, 12-24 months lost 4.5%
for earnings announcements: past winners earned positive returns for the first seven months past losers earned positive returns for 13 month period assessment
Dremans research
Sample of 1500 largest stocks, each over a billion in capitalization Develop a portfolio of stocks with low P/E ratio Portfolio established in 1970 By 1997 portfolio grew from $10,000 to $909,000 while the market benchmark was $326,000. Contrarian portfolios did better in down markets During down quarters over the years, market averaged down 7.5%; Contrarian portfolio down 4%
Dreman emphasized the importance of reinforcing events and event triggers creating perceptual change Positive Surprises are very favorable for unpopular stocks (not so for popular stocks) Negative Surprises are very consequential for popular stocks (not so for unpopular stocks)
What it means?
Consistent with positive feedback traders hypothesis on market price Market under reacts to information about the short term prospects of firms but overreacts to information about their long term prospects This is plausible given that the nature of the information available about a firms short term prospects, such as earnings forecasts, is different form the nature of the more ambiguous information that is used by investors to assess a firms longer term prospects David Dreman: Contrarian strategies do better than the market over time Importance of earnings surprises on popular and unpopular stocks reveals a market sentiment is significant
Explanations/Theories (cont)
Barberis, Shlieifer and Vishny 1998 Learning model explanation Actual earnings follow a random walk, but individual s believe that earnings follow either a steady growth trend, or else earnings are mean reverting. Representativeness heuristic (finds patterns in data too readily, tends to over react to information) and conservatism (clings to prior beliefs, under reacts to information). Interaction of representativeness heuristic and conservatism: explains short term under reaction and long term over reaction Investors reaction to current information condition on past information. Investor tends to under react to information that is preceded by a small quantity of similar information and to over react to information that is preceded by a large quantity of similar information.
Explanations/Theories (cont)
Hong and Stein 1997 Under and Over reactions arise from the interaction of momentum traders and news watchers Momentum traders make partial use of the information continued in recent price trends, and ignore fundamental news Fundamental traders rationally use fundamental news but ignore prices.
Explanations/Theories (cont)
Bloomfiled, Libby and Nelson
Traders in experimental markets undervalue the information of others People with evidence that is favorable but unrealizable tend to overreact to information, whereas people with evidence that is somewhat favorable but reliable under react