logo
You never forget your first time investing, study finds

You never forget your first time investing, study finds

Irish Times10-06-2025
It seems you never forget your first stock. A new study, Love at First Trade, finds people form a surprisingly strong attachment to their debut stock – even when it doesn't love them back.
Researchers analysed trading records of Chinese retail investors from 2013 to 2016 and found a persistent 'first stock bias'. Investors kept buying their first stock again and again – more often, and with more money, than any other.
This held true whether it had made or lost them money.
Some investors even chase stocks in the same industry, hoping lightning will strike twice. It rarely does: returns from rebuying the first stock tend to underperform.
READ MORE
Men are especially prone, particularly if their first trade was a winner. Experience is no cure: seasoned investors were more biased, not less.
The primacy effect is well known in psychology. This study shows how stubbornly it shapes portfolios.
'First love is often beautiful, yet blind – and sometimes painful,' the authors conclude. The same, it seems, goes for that first trade.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shopping for agreement: the truth about financial advice
Shopping for agreement: the truth about financial advice

Irish Times

time17 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Shopping for agreement: the truth about financial advice

We seek financial advice to make better, more accurate decisions – don't we? Well, maybe not. Often, we're shopping for agreement, looking for someone to bless the choice we were leaning toward all along. So suggests a recent study, Motivated Advice Seeking: Are Advice Seekers Trying to Be More Accurate?, which says we don't want better advice, but better justification. Across five studies on real-world decision-making, many involving financial trade-offs – from quitting a job to covering medical bills, booking a holiday or renovating a kitchen – researchers found that people seek out advisers they believe will agree with them. They also frame questions in biased ways, emphasising the option they secretly hope to hear endorsed. READ MORE Advisers pick up on these cues, resulting in advice being 'co-created by both motivated advisees and motivated advisers'. Result: a feedback loop where confidence goes up, but decision quality doesn't. In financial terms, that can mean wasted money, missed opportunities or preventable regret. In short, it's less about clarity than comfort. Next time you seek financial advice, ask yourself: am I looking for advice or affirmation?

Italy fines fast fashion giant Shein over 'green' claims
Italy fines fast fashion giant Shein over 'green' claims

The Journal

timea day ago

  • The Journal

Italy fines fast fashion giant Shein over 'green' claims

ITALY'S COMPETITION WATCHDOG said today it has fined the company responsible for Shein's websites in Europe €1m for false and confusing claims about the e-commerce giant's efforts to be environmentally 'green'. The AGCM watchdog accuses the China-founded fast-fashion colossal of having 'adopted a misleading communication strategy regarding the characteristics and environmental impact of its clothing products'. The fine was imposed on Infinite Styles Services Co. Ltd, the company responsible for managing Shein's product trading websites in Europe, the authority said in a statement. Advertisement The AGCM accused it of 'misleading and/or deceptive environmental messages and claims… in the promotion and sale of Shein-branded clothing products'. These were 'in some instances, vague, generic, and/or overly emphatic, and in others, misleading or omissive'. In particular, claims about the recyclability of products 'were found to be either false or at least confusing', it said. Consumers could easily be led to believe Shein products were made exclusively from sustainable materials and fully recyclable, 'a statement which, given the fibres used and current recycling systems, does not reflect reality'. The AGCM also took issue with the retailer's claims it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25% by 2030 and reach zero emissions by 2050. Related Reads Opinion: When is Ireland going to ban fast fashion brands? Opinion: Fast fashion conglomerates are having a profoundly negative impact on Irish businesses These 'vague' pledges by a company which has seen phenomenal growth in recent years were 'contradicted by an actual increase in Shein's greenhouse gas emissions in 2023 and 2024″, it said. In a statement to news organisation AFP, Shein said it had 'cooperated fully' with the watchdog's investigation and 'took immediate action' to address the concerns, saying all environmental claims on the website were now 'clear, specific and compliant with regulations'. Environmentalists have long warned of the damage wreaked by the fast-fashion sector's wasteful trend of mass producing low-cost clothes that are quickly thrown away. Fast fashion uses up massive amounts of water, produces hazardous chemicals and clogs up landfills in poor countries with textile waste, while also generating greenhouse gases in production, transport and disposal.

Italian regulator slaps €1m fine on Shein's Dublin-based European online company
Italian regulator slaps €1m fine on Shein's Dublin-based European online company

Irish Examiner

timea day ago

  • Irish Examiner

Italian regulator slaps €1m fine on Shein's Dublin-based European online company

Italy's competition authority (AGCM) imposed a €1m fine on China-founded online fast fashion retailer Shein on Monday for misleading customers about the environmental impact of its products. It is Shein's second financial sanction by a European competition authority in little more than a month, after France fined the company €40m on July 3 over fake discounts and misleading environmental claims. The Italian fine was imposed on Infinite Styles Services Co. Limited, a Dublin-based company that operates Shein's website in Europe, following an investigation by AGCM launched last September. In a statement, Shein said it has cooperated fully with AGCM and took immediate action to address the concerns raised. AGCM said the environmental sustainability and social responsibility messages on Shein's website "were sometimes vague, generic, and/or overly emphatic, and in other cases omitted and misleading." Shein's claims on circular system design and product recyclability "were found to be false or at the very least confusing", and the green credentials of its 'evoluSHEIN by design' collection were overstated, the regulator said. Shein promotes the 'evoluSHEIN by design' collection as clothes made using more sustainable and responsible manufacturing. AGCM said consumers could be misled to think that the collection was made with materials that are fully recyclable, "a fact that, considering the fibres used and currently existing recycling systems, is untrue". Shein, in its statement, said: "We have strengthened our internal review processes and improved our website to ensure that all environmental claims are clear, verifiable, and compliant with regulations." AGCM also took issue with Shein's "vague and generic" commitments to cut greenhouse emissions by 25% by 2030 and to net zero by 2050, noting that Shein's emissions increased in 2023 and 2024. The Italian regulator said its overall assessment was influenced by an "increased duty of care" falling on Shein, "because it operates in a highly polluting sector and with highly polluting methods". AGCM is in charge of consumer protection as well as competition.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store