Effect Of Behavioral Finance Factors On Investment Decisions Of Individual Investors At The Nairobi Securities Exchange In Nairobi County
Date
2017
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Kca University
Abstract
iii
ABSTRACT
Recent studies on individual investors’ behaviour have shown that people tend to react to and
interpret the same information differently, creating psychological biases which are categorized as
Behavioural Finance. These behavioural biases were categorized into four broad behavioural
factors: Heuristics, prospect, herd and Market factors. The objective of the study was to
determine the effect of heuristic, prospect, herd and market factors on the investment decisions
of individual investors at the Nairobi Securities Exchange in Nairobi County. The study
incorporated cross sectional non-experimental descriptive research design. The target population
was the individual investors at the Nairobi Securities Exchange, sampled from 385 individual
investors in Nairobi County. Close-ended questionnaires were used to collect data whereas
snowballing sampling technique was used to sample respondents from our field survey. The data
was coded and analyzed using STATA, and analyzed using multiple linear regression method.
The findings of the study reveal that heuristic factors, prospect factors, herd factors and market
factors had a joint effect of 16.01% on the investment decision of individual investors at the NSE
controlled by the year of schooling, income, gender, type of investor, type of security and age
variables, while the remaining percentage was influenced by other factors excluded from the
model. Heuristic, herd and market factors had a positive significant effect on investment
decisions whereas prospect factor had a negative significant effect on investment decision. A
multinomial logistic regression was also fitted to measure the same variables but the findings
reveal that the overall p-value >0.05, making it insignificant. From the multiple linear regression
models, the findings reveal that individual investors have little information or the technical
knowhow of how to trade at the NSE. Individual investors should spend more time in school
since this is evident from the study. The Nairobi Securities Exchange should step up its efforts to
increase Investor education awareness since it key to overcoming unfavorable investment
outcomes caused by behavioral biases.