Back to Papers

What Matters to Individual Investors? Evidence from the Horse's Mouth

James J. Choi, Adriana RobertsonFinance资产定价UTD24
Journal of Finance2020-02-25Yale University; Deutz (Germany); Cornell University; Ingersoll Rand (United States)DOI
Citations235
Influential7
References151
Semantic Scholar

ABSTRACT We survey a representative sample of U.S. individuals about how well leading academic theories describe their financial beliefs and decisions. We find substantial support for many factors hypothesized to affect portfolio equity share, particularly background risk, investment horizon, rare disasters, transactional factors, and fixed costs of stock market participation. Individuals tend to believe that past mutual fund performance is a good signal of stock‐picking skill, actively managed funds do not suffer from diseconomies of scale, value stocks are safer and do not have higher expected returns, and high‐momentum stocks are riskier and do have higher expected returns.

Diseconomies of scalePortfolioStock (firearms)Equity (law)EconomicsTransaction costFinancial economicsBusinessInvestment decisionsTransactional leadershipActuarial scienceMonetary economics