Panic selling is common after stock market dips, and it’s more likely to happen with certain investors, according to research from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
When the market drops, men over age 45 who are married with children and have self-described “excellent investment experience” are more prone to sell-offs, the research shows.
“These are significant drivers of panic selling,” said co-author Chi Heem Wong, researcher at MIT. And many who leave the stock market don’t return, thereby missing out on recoveries.
More from Personal Finance:
Did you panic sell during the latest stock market dip? When to get back in
Make these financial and career moves before you quit your job
Crypto plunge a wake-up call — and tax opportunity — for investors
While the study doesn’t uncover why some investors may be more vulnerable to emotional selling, financial experts say the findings raise further questions about how these factors — gender, age, marriage and family — affect behavior.
The research suggests these sellers have emotional overreactions defined by their decisions having the opposite of the intended effect, said Amanda Clayman, a financial therapist in Los Angeles.
“Clearly, these are people who are trying to protect themselves,” she said.
While most investors are vulnerable to emotional choices, the findings from MIT align with other research showing men may be more prone to acting on their impulses.
Women are not as likely to take a huge decisive action like this because they’re not quite sure that their impulse or their feeling is correct.
Amanda Clayman
FINANCIAL THERAPIST
“Women are not as likely to take a huge decisive action like this because they’re not quite sure that their impulse or their feeling is correct,” Clayman said.
Men are 35% more likely to trade investments than women, according to a study from Fidelity, and trying to time the market often leads to lower performance.
Moreover, those trading to achieve stability during volatile periods often see the opposite results, another study from the University of British Columbia finds.
Control bias
Some males face pressure from an early age to “figure it out themselves,” which may trigger a control bias, or thinking that can influence results when they can not, said certified financial planner Teresa Bailey, wealth strategist at Waddell & Associates in Nashville, Tennessee.
“They sometimes feel that if they know enough about a subject, they should be able to control the outcome,” she said. “Unfortunately, there are far more variables at play when attempting to time the market.”
And once these investors get lost, it can be tough to seek guidance if they feel it’s their role to solve the problem on their own, she said.