Journalartikel

Birds of a Feather: The Impact of Homophily on the Propensity to Follow Financial Advice


AutorenlisteStolper, Oscar; Walter, Andreas

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2019

Seiten524-563

ZeitschriftThe Review of Financial Studies

Bandnummer32

Heftnummer2

ISSN0893-9454

eISSN1465-7368

Open Access StatusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhy082

VerlagOxford University Press


Abstract
Homophilyindividuals' affinity for others like themis a powerful principle that governs whose opinions people attend to. Using nearly 2,400 advisory meetings, we find that homophily has a significant positive impact on the likelihood of following financial advice. The increased likelihood of following stems from homophily on gender and age for male clients and from sameness on marital and parental status for female advisees. Moreover, the homophily effect is mitigated by reduced information asymmetry between client and advisor and a long-term relationship with the bank. Our results suggest that client-advisor matching increases individuals' propensity to follow financial advice.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilStolper, O. and Walter, A. (2019) Birds of a Feather: The Impact of Homophily on the Propensity to Follow Financial Advice, The Review of Financial Studies, 32(2), pp. 524-563. https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhy082

APA-ZitierstilStolper, O., & Walter, A. (2019). Birds of a Feather: The Impact of Homophily on the Propensity to Follow Financial Advice. The Review of Financial Studies. 32(2), 524-563. https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhy082



Schlagwörter


ADVISERSHOMOGENEITYLITERACYMULTILEVEL ANALYSISRETAIL INVESTORSSOCIAL-RELATIONS


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