Abstract
Shareholders of a Regional Bell Operating Company (RBOC) tend to live in the area which it serves, and an RBOC's customers tend to hold its shares rather than other RBOCs' equity. The geographic bias of the RBOC investors is closely related to the general tendency of households' portfolios to be concentrated, of employees' tendency to own their employers' stocks in their retirement accounts, and to the home country bias in the international arena. Together, these phenomena provide compeling evidence that people invest in the familiar while often ignoring the principles of portfolio theory.
Reprinted in The Psychology of World Equity Markets vol. 1, Werner De Bondt, editor, Edward Elgar 2005, pages 474-495.
Full Citation
Review of Financial Studies
vol.
14
,
(January 01, 2001):
659
-680
.