Circle of incompetence: Sense of understanding as an improper guide to investment risk
Publication type
FT ranked journal articlePublication Year
2018Journal
Journal of Marketing ResearchPublication Volume
55Publication Issue
4Publication Begin page
474Publication End page
488
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Consumers incorrectly rely on their sense of understanding of what a company does to evaluate investment risk. In three correlational studies, greater sense of understanding was associated with lower risk ratings (Study 1) and with prediction distributions of future stock performance that had lower standard deviations and higher means (Studies 2 and 3). In all studies, sense of understanding was unassociated with objective risk measures. Risk perceptions increased when the authors degraded sense of understanding by presenting company information in an unstructured versus structured format (Study 4). Sense of understanding also influenced downstream investment decisions. In a portfolio construction task, both novices and seasoned investors allocated more money to hard-to-understand companies for a risk-tolerant client relative to a risk-averse one (Study 5). Study 3 ruled out an alternative explanation based on familiarity. The results may explain both the enduring popularity and common misinterpretation of the “invest in what you know” philosophy.Keyword
Investment Risk, Consumer Behavior, Stock Prices, Consumer Expertise, Comprehension, Risk Perception, Financial Decision Making, Heuristics and Biases, Risk Perception, Sense of UnderstandingKnowledge Domain/Industry
Marketing & Salesae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1509/jmr.16.0429