| Literature DB >> 34955944 |
Neal S Hinvest1, Muhamed Alsharman2, Margot Roell1, Richard Fairchild2.
Abstract
Increasing financial trading performance is big business. A lingering question within academia and industry concerns whether emotions improve or degrade trading performance. In this study, 30 participants distributed hypothetical wealth between a share (a risk) and the bank (paying a small, sure, gain) within four trading games. Skin Conductance Response was measured while playing the games to measure anticipatory emotion, a covert emotion signal that impacts decision-making. Anticipatory emotion was significantly associated with trading performance but the direction of the correlation was dependent upon the share's movement. Thus, anticipatory emotion is neither wholly "good" nor "bad" for trading; instead, the relationship is context-dependent. This is one of the first studies exploring the association between anticipatory emotion and trading behaviour using trading games within an experimentally rigorous environment. Our findings elucidate the relationship between anticipatory emotion and financial decision-making and have applications for improving trading performance in novice and expert traders.Entities:
Keywords: anticipatory emotion; finance; investment; skin conductance; skin conductance response; trading
Year: 2021 PMID: 34955944 PMCID: PMC8696076 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.705476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Screenshot of one trial from a stock market game and the share pathways used in the four games.
Performance measures for each stock game.
| Trend 1 | Trend 2 | Trend 3 | Trend 4 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| |
| Average return on original endowment | −5.28% | 5.44% | 5.83% | 3.66% | 5.38% | 1.46% | −5.46% | 6.16% |
| Total trading volume | £49,963.46 | £31,312.61 | £17,195.87 | £22,496.61 | £35,970.06 | £23,791.26 | £13,823.91 | £9,423.69 |
| Average trading volume in each period | £5,551.50 | £7,849.88 | £1,878.83 | £6,222.53 | £3,904.71 | £5,488.05 | £1,513.55 | £2,664.54 |
| Return of “perfect” trader on original endowment | 13.96% | – | 13.67% | – | 13.40% | – | 11.25% | – |
SD stands for standard deviation. The “perfect” trader is a fictitious trader who invests all money into shares when the share price subsequently increases and invests all money into the bank when the share price subsequently decreases.
Figure 2Mean trial-by-trial skin conductance response (SCR) within each game plotted alongside share price.
Average residual PANAS scores for each game.
| Mean | 95% Confidence interval | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive valence | Trend 1 | 0.73 | 2.11 |
| Trend 2 | −2.37 | 2.17 | |
| Trend 3 | −1.73 | 2.54 | |
| Trend 4 | −0.13 | 2.04 | |
| Negative valence | Trend 1 | −2.97 | 1.89 |
| Trend 2 | −2.20 | 2.60 | |
| Trend 3 | −1.70 | 1.50 | |
| Trend 4 | −2.73 | 1.73 |
Residual scores were calculated by subtracting the value of reported positive/negative valence emotion after each game and subtracting it from the baseline positive/negative PANAS score, respectively, reported before the participant played the games.
Figure 3Mean positive and negatively valence residual positive and negative affect scale (PANAS) scores within each game. Error bars show 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 4Comparison of mean return on investment to the share pathway on the four stock market games.