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Do People Understand the Benefit of Diversification?

  • Nicholas Reinholtz
  • , Philip M. Fernbach
  • , Bart de Langhe

Research output: Indexed journal article Articlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Diversification—investing in imperfectly correlated assets—reduces volatility without sacrificing expected returns. Although the expected return of a diversified portfolio is the weighted average return of its constituent parts, the variance of the portfolio is less than the weighted average variance of its constituent parts. Our results suggest that very few people have correct statistical intuitions about the effects of diversification. The average person in our data sees no benefit of diversification in terms of reducing portfolio volatility. Many people, especially those low in financial literacy, believe diversification actually increases the volatility of a portfolio. These people seem to believe that the unpredictability of individual assets compounds when aggregated together. Additionally, most people believe diversification increases the expected return of a portfolio. Many of these people correctly link diversification with the concept of risk reduction but seem to understand risk reduction to mean greater returns on average. We show that these beliefs can lead people to construct investment portfolios that mismatch investors’ risk preferences. Furthermore, these beliefs may help explain why many investors are underdiversified.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)7322-7343
Number of pages22
JournalManagement Science
Volume67
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021

Keywords

  • Decision making
  • Diversification
  • Financial decision making
  • Investing
  • Judgment
  • Numerical cognition

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