Irrational Influence on Initial Public Offering Investment; a Survey of Siaya Institute of Technology Teachers (Kenya)
Abstract
Societies are organized around the assumption that human beings are perfectly rational in their
decision making process. The context in which people make decisions has a significant influence
just as the choice itself. This research aimed at identifying irrational factors that influence initial
public offering (lPOs) investment decisions by teachers of Siaya Institute of Technology. To
achieve this objective, the research adopted a descriptive cross-sectional survey design collecting
data from 104 participants through drop and pick later questionnaires. Finance theory is premised
on the assumption that market agents behave rationally but this is not always the case as is
evidenced in market uncertainties of low/high responsiveness of price to new information,
excessive volumes traded, under reactionl over reaction of market participants and excessive
volatility prevalent in financial markets. This scenario points to some forces other than economic
determinants influencing investors' decision making processes. In our decision making process,
human beings are influenced by framing and social context. Policy makers need to focus their
attention on how physical and social environments shape choice patterns which calls for policies
informed by realistic human decision making process. Irrational influences on investment are
psychological traits affecting investment returns of risky assets as well as volatility of asset
returns as a consequence of noise in their information. Investment choices are motivated by
factors other than prices: social norms, habits, formal and informal authority, non-monetary
incentives, community expectations and the way choices are presented. Rationality therefore
denotes making understandable choices in terms that accord with reason and logic. Research
fmdings reveal that for teachers of Siaya Institute of Technology, trading within the capital
markets is hardly based on fundamental analysis which analyzes quality of firm products, firm
corporate social responsibility, firm manager expertise and perceived ethics of the company but
rather on technical analysis. The teachers act irrationally by holding onto losing stock for fear of
receiving negative returns, have little information on market trends, are risk averse and believe in
holding superior portfolios. This is also due to their optimism/pessimism bias and the fact that
they are privately informed by their workmates and social group. They are also influenced by
media news releases, regular broker recommendations, family members' purchase approval and
social group popular opinion in their portfolio selection.
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Citation
Degree Of Master Of Business Administration (MBA),Publisher
University of Nairobi,