Publication | Closed Access
All That Glitters: The Effect of Attention and News on the Buying Behavior of Individual and Institutional Investors
4.5K
Citations
46
References
2007
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingConsumer ResearchBuying BehaviorNet BuyersExperimental FinanceBehavioral FinanceManagementExperimental EconomicsIndividual InvestorsInstitutional InvestorsBehavioral SciencesAttention-grabbing StocksMarket BehaviorMarketingFinanceBehavioral EconomicsMarket ManipulationBusinessDecision Science
We test and confirm the hypothesis that individual investors are net buyers of attention-grabbing stocks, e.g., stocks in the news, stocks experiencing high abnormal trading volume, and stocks with extreme one-day returns. Attention-driven buying results from the difficulty that investors have searching the thousands of stocks they can potentially buy. Individual investors do not face the same search problem when selling because they tend to sell only stocks they already own. We hypothesize that many investors consider purchasing only stocks that have first caught their attention. Thus, preferences determine choices after attention has determined the choice set.
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