Cultural Influences on Financial Decisions
February 12, 2025
The ICICI bank is the largest private sector bank in India. It was also famous for being one of the organizations where a woman was able to break the glass ceiling and hold the top job. Chanda Kocchar, the bank’s woman Chief Executive Officer had been responsible for its rapid growth. The bank had scaled […]
Start-up businesses are affected by a wide variety of factors. Macroeconomic factors such as business cycles affect start-up organizations as much as they affect any other businesses. In fact, since start-ups are in a nascent stage, they face a bigger impact from these business cycles. Start-ups that face recession or slowdown early after their inception […]
The commercial banking industry is undergoing a rapid transformation. This transformation has been enabled by the increasing use of digital technologies in the commercial banking industry. Open banking has become a game changer when it comes to the field of commercial banking. It has enabled the use of many other modern banking solutions. Multi-banking is […]
Hedge funds are often looked upon as being unethical in their practices. This is partly because there is public outrage about the amount of money that some of the fund managers are able to earn as income even though they are supposedly causing systemic crisis. The fact that the names of hedge fund managers have […]
Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) is another popular metric that is used widely in financial analysis. The reason for its popularity is that like ROA, ROIC can be used by both equity and debt holders. Also, like ROA, it provides data about return to the company as a whole and is not affected by leverage. […]
Investors who have been in the market for a long time know that investing is an emotional activity as much as it is a financial activity. This is the reason that people who have a higher degree of self-control generally tend to do better than their peers. Self-control bias may seem like an obvious and simple flaw. However, it has a profound effect on the behavior of any investor. The details of the self-control bias have been listed below:
Self-control bias stems from a behavioral flaw called hyperbolic discounting. As per hyperbolic discounting, there is an inherent flaw in the way investors perceive gains. They have a large appetite for short term gains. However, if they are asked to sacrifice short term gains for long term gains which will be much bigger, most will still choose the short term gains. Hence, investors have a skewed time preference, which negatively impacts their decision making. In simple words, investors with this bias are inclined towards spending more today at the expense of saving less for the future.
Self-control bias is not only seen in the financial world. It is also seen in the other walks of our daily life. For instance, people may be unable to lose weight despite knowing that it is in their best long term interest to do so. They may continuously choose to eat unhealthy food despite knowing that it will cause harm to them.
The bottom line is that self-control bias is not small or frivolous. Like other behavioral biases, this bias also has a huge impact on the portfolio of the investor as well as the return that they gain from it.
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