%0 Journal Article %J Journal of Consumer Affairs %D 2015 %T Cognitive Ability and the Stock Reallocations of Retirees during the Great Recession %A Chris Browning %A Michael S. Finke %K Health Conditions and Status %K Net Worth and Assets %K Public Policy %K Retirement Planning and Satisfaction %X Retirees are increasingly responsible for managing their retirement savings. The ability to manage these assets efficiently can have an important impact on retirement well-being. Lower levels of cognitive ability in old age can reduce an investor's ability to control emotional responses to a loss. Greater sensitivity to loss may increase preferences for safety following a market decline, resulting in allocations away from stocks that are associated with long-term underperformance. We investigate whether cognitive ability is related to stock reallocations among retirees during the Great Recession. Using the Health and Retirement Study, we find that cognitive ability is negatively related to allocations away from stock. Compared to those with the lowest levels of cognitive ability, respondents with higher cognitive ability are 40 less likely to reduce their stock allocation by 50 or more. These results suggest that the quality of investment decisions in old age may be compromised by cognitive decline. %B Journal of Consumer Affairs %I 49 %V 49 %P 356-375 %G eng %N 2 %4 retirement savings/assets/health shocks/cognitive ability/stock reallocations/Great Recession/Cognitive decline %$ 999999 %R 10.1111/joca.12065 %0 Thesis %D 2013 %T Managing retirement resources: evidence from the HRS %A Chris Browning %K Expectations %K Health Conditions and Status %K Net Worth and Assets %K Retirement Planning and Satisfaction %X Households are required to make a variety of decisions in pursuit of their retirement goals. These decisions are often complex and require the estimation and input of multiple factors when analyzing alternatives. Complexity and uncertainty have been found to lead to behavioral biases and a dependence on heuristics when making decisions. These deficiencies create a failure to incorporate valuable information, an overreliance on recent events, and inaccurate estimations of future outcomes. When these factors are combined with widespread low levels of financial sophistication and declining cognition the result is often behavior that is contradictory to rational expectations and detrimental to lifetime wealth and utility. Households are bound at a variety of levels by the limitations described above. Sophisticated households and those with higher levels of cognitive ability are more likely to participate in financial markets, enjoy higher returns on investments, and greater levels of wealth. Those with less sophistication and cognitive ability may fail to understand complex financial products, have less consistent preferences, and be more likely to engage in behavior that is inconsistent and detrimental to long-term goals and overall well-being. Given the variation in levels of financial sophistication and cognitive ability, we seek to evaluate how households make decisions in the face of market complexity, and in some cases how these decisions affect financial outcomes. Using the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) we give special focus to the decisions and behavior of older households. We look specifically at the impact of financial sophistication on individuals' ability to accurately value life annuities, how cognitive ability is related to stock reallocations during the great recession, and how cognitive ability relates to the asset decumulation decisions of retirees. %I Texas Tech University %C Lubbock, TX %V PhD %G eng %U http://hdl.handle.net/2346/58201 %4 expectations %$ 999999 %! Managing retirement resources: evidence from the HRS