Single Men Trade Stocks Too Much
Nick Kapur at The Motley Fool says that men trade stocks more frequently than women. This is not a good thing; the result of all this hyperactivity and overconfidence is lower earnings on your investment. He writes, "Worse still (for unmarried guys like me) is that single men trade a whopping 67% more than single women, earning them annual net returns of 2.3% less! The authors cite increased trading costs, taxes, and a greater tendency to speculate as reasons for this underperformance."
"Attention, Single Men: Stop Trading So Much" [The Motley Fool]
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Comments:
I don't get it why articles do not take an extra minute to provide a MLA or APA style reference, or link to the paper in question (in this case, the paper is accessible by the public).
Here's the link: [faculty.haas.berkeley.edu]
I certainly don't think it's too academic, and I don't major in economics or psychology. Could be organized better though.
@N.RobertMoses: Ah, yes, teaching the young and studying the way the world works, such an unproductive waste of time.
Somebody should tell Newton all those papers he wrote were "just to look like he was actually doing something productive."
@hateeecs: I know things are much different on the massive scale that most mutual fund managers work on... but what the hell? They could all be replaced by dart throwing monkeys and the performance would be similar or better.











This article doesn't really mean much more details on how those %s came about. Were they over a 1 year period? Were they over a 10 year period? How many participants were included in the survey.
All we know is that they used the the "oft-cited study by Brad Barber and Terrance Odean".