When you open your portfolio and discover that it has declined since you last looked, it is not pleasant. And many investors have probably experienced those negative emotions due to the market’s performance over the last month and a half.
56% of individual investors say that their personal experiences and emotions affect their investment decisions, proving that they are not immune to emotions.
10,000 investors in 12 countries participated in the most recent Retail Investor Beat poll conducted by brokerage eToro (ETOR). Not all of those investors were eToro customers, but 1,000 of them were situated in the United States.
The survey explored how people’s investing was impacted by recent market volatility and emotions. It was discovered that people’s feelings and prior experiences could aid in their development as investors. According to a survey of investors, 49% indicated they become more cautious and 25% said they become more resilient when they witness their portfolios decline.
“Money is very emotive, for better or bad. During times like these, when losses are so rapid, it can be difficult to navigate,” Bret Kenwell, eToro’s U.S. investing analyst, told MarketWatch. The S&P 500 SPX correction in March, according to Kenwell, was the index’s fifth-fastest decline from a high to correction levels over the previous 75 years.
Investors were asked to select the emotion that most influenced their investment choices in the study; 43% selected fear of loss, 35% selected optimism, and 22% selected enthusiasm.
The fact that both good and negative emotions affect investing decisions is an intriguing conclusion to draw from this. Both optimism and enthusiasm are good, forward-looking emotions that also affect investment, but fear of loss may be a sign of a negative attitude.
According to Kenwell, the stock market’s recent performance may have led investors to believe that equities will typically rise following a decline. He cited the early 2020 COVID-19 pandemic crash and the 2022 bear market. Even though many equities experienced large losses during those periods, some firms, such as Meta Platforms Inc. (META) and Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), witnessed considerable recoveries, and the drawdowns were only temporary.
“Even though it sucks to go through the down spells, I think there’s an expectation that we’ll go back up,” Kenwell stated to BourseWatch.
This justification could account for another eToro survey finding. Only 8% of investors reported selling their investments in reaction to the recent market fluctuations, despite the fact that investors were motivated by increased volatility, the market’s decline, and their fear of losing money. Actually, 73% of investors either stuck to their current investing plan or utilized it as justification to purchase additional equities.
The data suggests that the notion that ordinary investors sell their holdings and flee when the market becomes volatile may out to be a misconception.
Conviction is another crucial investing feeling.
Tech stocks like the “Magnificent Seven”—Meta, Nvidia, Tesla Inc. (TSLA), Apple Inc. (AAPL), Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) (GOOG), and Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)—are popular among retail investors.
This is the case for several reasons. One reason is that individual investors typically purchase stock in businesses they are familiar with, and several of these digital companies and their goods have become very well-known. Furthermore, investors still have faith in these equities’ prospects because many of them have outperformed over the last few years.
The S&P 500’s information-technology sector XX:SP500.45 is down almost 13% year to date, and the “Magnificent Seven” equities have had a rough start to the year. However, investors continue to have faith in technology in spite of these recent setbacks.
48% of investors believe the “Magnificent Seven” will beat the overall market this year, according to the eToro survey. The fact that this percentage hasn’t altered over the previous quarter indicates that investors’ devotion to these stocks hasn’t been impacted by the tech selloff. Furthermore, compared to 59% in the previous quarter, 64% of investors anticipate that equities related to artificial intelligence will increase in 2025.
“They seemed pretty confident – more confident than I thought they would be,” Kenwell said in an interview with MarketWatch. “I expected to see the sentiment come down a lot more.”
Another emotion that could influence people’s investing decisions is confidence. Sixty-six percent of investors said they were on course to meet their long-term investing objectives. Since the second quarter of 2023, that proportion has been the highest.
Retail investors are therefore still feeling rather resilient in spite of the current market turbulence.