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Title
Behavioral factors and investment decisions by traders in Kibuye market, Kisumu town, Kenya |
Full text
http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke/11295/93340 |
Date
2015 |
Author(s)
Ojwang', Paul O |
Abstract
Investment decisions are influenced by many factors depending on individual
investor's state of mind and investment environment. Many theories have been
advanced to explain how markets function and focus on rational human beings to
explain how investors make their investment decisions. Sultana (2010), posit that
traditional finance theory rely on two key assumptions under condition that investors
make rational decisions; and that they are unbiased in their predictions about future
returns of the securities. In contrast to these traditional finance theorists, Peters (1996)
notes that it is not the question of rationality in making investment decisions but it can
be said that how investors make their decisions is a subject matter of behavioral
psychology. This implies that there are irrational behaviors that tend to shape the
decision processes of traders on how, where and when to invest that go beyond
rational market fundamentals. Heuristics and Prospect theories that emerged from the
studies by Kahneman&Tversky (1974, 1979) conclude that investors do not always
behave rationally. Some investors are overconfidence of their skills and knowledge of
the market and hold the belief that any success is due to their talents and failure is due
to 'bad luck'. This is what Gervais and Odean (2001) refer to as self-attribution
which causes them to overestimate their talents as (Brown and Reilly, 2009). Thus,
there are behavioral factors that tend to influence investment decisions in different
market set up. This study aimed at establishing behavioral factors that influence
investment decisions by investors trading in Kibuye market, Kisumu Town. A
descriptive survey design was adopted to help address study objective. The study
populations were 400 traders who subscribe for annual trade licenses to operate in
Kibuye market. This is according to the Kisumu County, Ministry of Trade Registry
data (2015). A sample size representative of the population for the study consisted of
196determined using Krejcie& Morgan (1970) predetermined table of sample sizes
for different population sizes. The study employed stratified random sampling
technique to select the sample members. Purposive sampling was also used to identify
the traders (respondents) of the selected businesses in the market during data
collection. The study collected primary data using questionnaires containing a mixture
of structured and a 5-point likert scale questions. Descriptive statistics and factor
analysis were used to analyze the collected data with the help of SPSS 20.0 software.
The findings are presented in tabular forms and complemented by discussions. The
findings showed that investment decisions of traders in Kibuye market is significantly
influenced by: over-confidence and market information (at mean of 4.01 each),
availability/ anchoring bias (mean of 3.72), loss-aversion and mental accounting
(mean of 3.60), representativeness bias (3.37), risk-aversion (3.06) and herd behavior
(3.00) in that order. The study recommends investor education to the investing
population in Kibuye market in order to help avert a possible unfavorable investments
outcomes caused by behavioral biases. In order to manage the excesses of behavioral
influences to investment decision making, training programs that create investor
awareness and ability to identify and guard against behavioral biases that lead to poor
investment choices should be offered to both potential and existing traders in the
Kibuye market. For this, the County Government of Kisumu should undertake to
formulate and implement these programs given the importance of Kibuye market in
generation of revenue. |
Language
en |
Publisher
University of Nairobi |
Type of publication
Thesis |
Format
application/pdf |
Repository
Nairobi - University of Nairobi
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Added to C-A: 2021-12-01;09:42:08 |
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