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Unveiling the Behavioural Biases of Retail Investors in Derivative Market

S.S. Mageswari and P. Sasirekha

The Review of Finance and Banking, 2024, vol. 16, issue 1, 85-103

Abstract: The derivative market is growing faster than capital markets in recent years. Investors’ focus is moved towards the futures market rather than on the stock market. The involvement of individual investors has increased in the derivative market. In investing, biases lead investors to make irrational and emotional decisions. The study tracks how investors’ behavioural biases influence their investment decisions and also analyses the moderating effect of “financial literacy” and “self-efficacy” in the derivatives market. The snowball sampling technique was used to collect the primary data from 125 investors from Coimbatore city. Factor Analysis, Multiple Regression, and Structural equation Model were used for analysis. The results revealed that Behavioural biases such as “Herding Behaviour”, “Overconfidence” and “Mental Accounting” positively affect investing in the derivative market and the moderating variables “Financial Literacy”, and “Self-Efficacy” directly influence the behaviour of the investors which in turn affects derivative trading.

Date: 2024
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The Review of Finance and Banking is currently edited by Victor Dragota; Bogdan Negrea

More articles in The Review of Finance and Banking from Academia de Studii Economice din Bucuresti, Romania / Facultatea de Finante, Asigurari, Banci si Burse de Valori / Catedra de Finante Strada Mihai Eminescu nr.13-15, sector 1, Bucuresti, Romania. Contact information at EDIRC.
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