Abstract

ABSTRACT The aim of this study is to verify whether the framing effects of past performance information affect the risk perception of individuals for fixed-income and variable income fund. We assess whether risk perception varies depending on how information is communicated to investors, considering the relevance of possible framing effects arising from how information is presented in investment funds’ prospectuses and reports. This study is aimed at investors (individual and institutional) and fund industry regulators, highlighting the importance of past performance presentation. This article aims to contribute to the area by investigating how investors are influenced by varying perceptions of risk and return on fixed-income and variable-income assets, depending on information presentation format. The approach used is based on a 2x2 factorial quasi-experiment, in which format (within-subject) and time horizon (between-subjects) effects are tested in a sample of 143 respondents. Our results indicate that, for investment in a variable-income fund, a monthly yield presentation format leads to higher perceived risk, and that a framing emphasizing fund value evolution leads to higher perceived returns. As for investment in a fixed-income fund, the framing that emphasizes fund value leads to both higher perceived risk and higher perceived returns. When comparing the results for the two types of investments, the risk perception was higher for variable-income than for fixed income funds. However, perceived returns were higher for fixed income than for variable-income funds due to the framing effect, although realized returns do not corroborate this perception.

Highlights

  • Monetary resources invested in the retail segment of the financial investment industry currently amounts to R$ 1,855.8 billion (Anbima, 2019b)

  • Our aim in this study is to investigate whether changes in charts format and timescale used to present investment funds’ past performance influence the individual’s risk perception for each fund

  • The results of this study indicate, in general, that format effects affect the respondent’s risk perception for the two types of fund in opposite ways: while for fixed-income IMA-General index the line chart increases risk perception, for BOVA11 variable-income index the bar chart gives the feeling of a riskier investment

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Summary

Introduction

Monetary resources invested in the retail segment of the financial investment industry currently amounts to R$ 1,855.8 billion (Anbima, 2019b). Between 2014 and 2018 investments in investment funds doubled in volume, from R$ 280 billion to R$ 596 billion, an increase from 22% to 33% in the investment fund industry’s share in the total volume of financial investments over the period This trend can be explained in part by the fall in the basic interest rate, which led investors to seek more profitable investment options, such as investment funds (Goeking, 2018). In this context, understanding the investment profile of Brazilians, with a view to encouraging investment diversification beyond savings accounts, has been a subject of research in the financial sector (B3, 2019). Financial education in Brazil, falls short of other countries, hindered by the lack of initiatives to disseminate financial investment knowledge (Savoia, Saito, & Santana, 2007)

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