Abstract
This study investigates the impacts of behavioral finance on stock market volatility. The primary aims are to explain the reasons behind changes in the SandP 500 price within the context of behavioral finance and to analyze investor behavior in response to these changes. To achieve this, the research employs time-series analysis over a 10-year period, focusing on the SandP 500, real interest rates, consumer confidence, market volatility and credit default swaps while considering the effects of behavioral biases. The findings reveal several significant correlations: rising real interest rates negatively affect stocks due to loss aversion and sentiment. Conversely, higher consumer confidence tends to positively influence the stock market, driven by herding behavior and optimism. Additionally, market volatility shows a negative correlation with the SandP 500, influenced by risk aversion, recency bias and herding behavior. Moreover, an increase in credit default swap rates leads to stock market declines, primarily influenced by risk perception, loss aversion and herding behavior.
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CITATION STYLE
Akin, I., & Akin, M. (2024). Behavioral finance impacts on US stock market volatility: An analysis of market anomalies. Behavioural Public Policy. https://doi.org/10.1017/bpp.2024.13
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