Abstract
This study
focuses on the individual investments of employees of Turkish finance sectors
in capital markets. The study has two main objectives. One of these is to
investigate whether or not institutional investors show “rational investor behaviors”
also in relation to their individual investments. For this reason, it is aimed
to reveal whether or not the institutional investor deviates from their mindset
employed while they are doing their job professionally and is affected by
biases when their own individual investments are in question. Another purpose of the study is to find the
bias or biases among representativeness, conservatism and overconfidence biases
by which Turkish institutional investors are influenced in their individual
investments. For this purpose,
institutional investors in Istanbul (Turkey) who could be reached by using the
method of convenience sampling were directed questions on their
representativeness, conservatism and overconfidence biases in their individual
investment decisions, 2 hypotheses were formed for each type of bias, and these
hypotheses were tested using Pearson chi-squared test. As a result of the analyses, it was
observed that Turkish institutional investors were not influenced by
overconfidence bias in their individual investments. On the other hand,
institutional investors were found to be affected by conservatism bias.
Additionally, no precise conclusion could be made regarding whether or not
representativeness bias was effective on the decisions of the institutional
investors about their individual investments. In the study, in general, it was
concluded that the institutional investors were influenced by behavioral biases
by showing normal investor behaviors under certain conditions regarding their
decisions on their individual investments, rather than showing rational
investor behaviors.