Abstract

This paper examines the financial literacy of mutual fund retail investors and its relationship with their investment outcomes. Using a unique dataset on Chinese mutual fund retail investors containing a survey on financial literacy, we find that women display significantly lower financial literacy than men. Investors with a higher level of education and richer investment experience have higher financial literacy. A one-standard-deviation increase in advanced financial literacy is associated with a probability decrease of an individual investor suffering a major loss by 1.940 percentage points, >13% of the sample average. Highly literate investors also show more sophistication concerning fee-related issues: they are more likely to be aware of investment charges, to avoid high-fee funds sold by intermediaries, and to trade less. Moreover, we find that advanced literacy has a significantly larger impact on investment performance than basic literacy. These results can be helpful to the policy debate on the effects of financial education.

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