Our behavior as investors and how this behavior influences our buying and selling decisions is a hot topic to explore, beyond things like macroeconomic analyses and the valuation of individual assets.
We describe a good investor as a person who is 100% rational and who thinks exclusively based on data and objective assessments. The reality is much more complex because, although the rational investor is an aspiration for all of us who operate in the financial markets, people are not always rational individuals since they and we have emotions.
Emotions are, by nature, irrational and often go against pure logic, a risk for the investor. It is neither complete nor useful to simply say, "be rational and eliminate emotion." Emotions are a part of us. We can’t eliminate them unnecessarily. We must know them, understand them and know how to manage them.
It is a long journey for an investor, at the end of which they will be more aware and competent.
One of the most common biases that we have as investors is the home bias: it is a behavior, or rather a tendency of investors to prefer stocks of their own country of origin, ignoring in the worst cases, or minimizing in the best cases, foreign shares.
Initially, the most widespread explanation for this trend was the objective limits encountered for investing in foreign markets (e.g., high transaction costs or various legal restrictions). The most accepted interpretation is that this derives from our predisposition as human beings who prefer to always deal with something familiar rather than having to deal with something they do not know. This happens when investing in companies that, at least according to our minds, we believe we know.
It is not an exclusively Italian phenomenon because it is present in developed countries and emerging economies: for an American, almost all the securities or a portion ranging from 70 to 80% in the portfolio are part of the American market.
However, while one can understand why investors in an economic superpower invest purely in their economy, one cannot be as understanding of investors in emerging countries or small economies. An academic study published in the late 1980s found that Swedish investors had portfolios almost exclusively composed of domestic investments: Sweden represented only 1% of the world equity market.
Being a widespread trend, here are the factors that trigger it:
Once you understand all this, you should rely on a financial professional who cannot fail to give this advice: analyze your portfolio and diversify.
Investing in local companies can bring enormous advantages and benefits, but we must always remember there is a sea of opportunities beyond our walls. We prefer to invest in something closest to us, but that doesn't mean we must stop there.
By committing ourselves and studying, we could pursue even more opportunities. Several factors are considered disadvantages of investing abroad. But if we apply a larger lens, we will realize that these are the same problems in investing only in our country.
In conclusion: diversify, diversify, diversify, without however going to the extreme, an opposite tendency that we can have.
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