Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making

There is a lack of studies on the relationship between Cognitive Uncertainty and Home Bias. On one hand, very few papers directly elicit or quantify Cognitive Uncertainty – they instead typically anaylse Cognitive Uncertainty through a qualitative lens, or focus on conventional (general) notions of...

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Main Authors: Liew, Guan Yen, Ng, Li Kang, Tay, Kai Jun
Other Authors: Bao Te
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175531
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1755312024-05-05T15:32:06Z Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making Liew, Guan Yen Ng, Li Kang Tay, Kai Jun Bao Te School of Social Sciences baote@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Cognitive uncertainty Home bias Behavioural economics Unfamiliarity Betting preference Choice domain Cash equivalent There is a lack of studies on the relationship between Cognitive Uncertainty and Home Bias. On one hand, very few papers directly elicit or quantify Cognitive Uncertainty – they instead typically anaylse Cognitive Uncertainty through a qualitative lens, or focus on conventional (general) notions of uncertainty applicable to a non-financial standpoint. On the other hand, Home Bias remains a puzzle despite extensive research on its underlying factors, with many of its associated traits unable to deliver a sharp or targeted explanation for the phenomenon. The widespread use of third party data in Home Bias research, while comprehensive, also raises issues regarding quality and difficulties in isolating individuals’ own cognitive biases. This paper aims to address these two limitations, and examine whether there is indeed a positive correlation between Cognitive Uncertainty and Home Bias. With familiarity as the key heuristic to bridge the two entities, this paper finds that individuals are indeed more cognitively uncertain in absolute valuation lotteries played on more unfamiliar countries, under a Cash Equivalent design. This, however, appears to be less of the case when considering relative valuation lotteries played under the Choice Domain design. Bachelor's degree 2024-04-29T00:16:11Z 2024-04-29T00:16:11Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Liew, G. Y., Ng, L. K. & Tay, K. J. (2024). Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175531 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175531 en HE1AY2324_03 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Cognitive uncertainty
Home bias
Behavioural economics
Unfamiliarity
Betting preference
Choice domain
Cash equivalent
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Cognitive uncertainty
Home bias
Behavioural economics
Unfamiliarity
Betting preference
Choice domain
Cash equivalent
Liew, Guan Yen
Ng, Li Kang
Tay, Kai Jun
Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
description There is a lack of studies on the relationship between Cognitive Uncertainty and Home Bias. On one hand, very few papers directly elicit or quantify Cognitive Uncertainty – they instead typically anaylse Cognitive Uncertainty through a qualitative lens, or focus on conventional (general) notions of uncertainty applicable to a non-financial standpoint. On the other hand, Home Bias remains a puzzle despite extensive research on its underlying factors, with many of its associated traits unable to deliver a sharp or targeted explanation for the phenomenon. The widespread use of third party data in Home Bias research, while comprehensive, also raises issues regarding quality and difficulties in isolating individuals’ own cognitive biases. This paper aims to address these two limitations, and examine whether there is indeed a positive correlation between Cognitive Uncertainty and Home Bias. With familiarity as the key heuristic to bridge the two entities, this paper finds that individuals are indeed more cognitively uncertain in absolute valuation lotteries played on more unfamiliar countries, under a Cash Equivalent design. This, however, appears to be less of the case when considering relative valuation lotteries played under the Choice Domain design.
author2 Bao Te
author_facet Bao Te
Liew, Guan Yen
Ng, Li Kang
Tay, Kai Jun
format Final Year Project
author Liew, Guan Yen
Ng, Li Kang
Tay, Kai Jun
author_sort Liew, Guan Yen
title Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
title_short Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
title_full Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
title_fullStr Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
title_sort exploring the relationship between cognitive uncertainty and home bias in financial decision-making
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175531
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