The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effect of age, occupation, and education on the relationship between behavioral biases and financial decision-making of individual investors based on The Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE). This study considers overconfidence bias, representativeness bias, disposition effect and herd-mentality bias on the financial investment decision-making of individual investors, taking steps to fill the empirical gap and practice gap in the context of behavioral finance. A questionnaire was utilized to collect data and the sample consisted of 114 individual respondents. Finally, data of 100 investors were analyzed by using Partial Least Square-Structural Equation Modeling approach. The study revealed that age moderates the relationship between disposition effect and investment decisions of individual investors. Further, occupation also moderates the relationship between herd-mentality bias and individual investors' investment decisions. This study is one of the pioneering studies examining the effect of socio-demographic factors of age, occupation, and education on the relationship between behavioral biases and individual investors' decision-making. Further, this study sheds light on the prior studies that relate socio-demographic factors to behavioral biases of individual investors' decision-making; particularly in the contexts of emerging markets while expanding the extant literature in behavioral finance.
CITATION STYLE
Gunathilaka, R. C. (2021). Effect of Socio-demographic Factors (Age, Occupation and Education) on Behavioral Biases of Individual Investors’ Decision-making Evidence from The Colombo Stock Exchange. International Journal of Accountancy, 1(2), 1. https://doi.org/10.4038/ija.v1i2.29
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