Article

The risk perceptions of individual investors

Details

Citation

Veld C & Veld-Merkoulova YV (2008) The risk perceptions of individual investors. Journal of Economic Psychology, 29 (2), pp. 226-252. http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/505589/description#description; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joep.2007.07.001

Abstract
Risk perceptions of individual investors are studied by asking experimental questions to 2,226 members of a consumer panel. Their responses are analyzed in order to find which risk measures they implicitly use. We find that most investors implicitly use more than one risk measure. For those investors who systematically perceive risk according to the same risk measure, semi-variance of returns is most popular. Semi-variance is similar to variance, but only negative deviations fro the mean or another benchmark are taken into account. Stock investors implicitly choose for semi-variance as a risk measure, while bond investors favor probability of loss. Investors state that they consider the original investment to be the most important benchmark, followed by the risk-free rate of return, and the market return. However, their choices in the experimental questionnaire study reveal that the market return is the most important benchmark.

Keywords
Individual investors; Risk profile; Variance; Downside risk measures; Shortfall; Semi-variance; Experimental questionnaire study; Stockholders; Risk perception

Journal
Journal of Economic Psychology: Volume 29, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2008
Publication date online10/07/2007
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/335
PublisherElsevier
Publisher URLhttp://www.elsevier.com/…tion#description
ISSN0167-4870