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Article ; Online: Cortisol and testosterone increase financial risk taking and may destabilize markets.

Cueva, Carlos / Roberts, R Edward / Spencer, Tom / Rani, Nisha / Tempest, Michelle / Tobler, Philippe N / Herbert, Joe / Rustichini, Aldo

Scientific reports

2015  Volume 5, Page(s) 11206

Abstract: ... in financial markets. Specifically, we recorded salivary levels of cortisol and testosterone in people participating ... in financial markets through increased risk taking behaviour, acting via different behavioural pathways. ... Our results suggest that changes in both cortisol and testosterone could play a destabilizing role ...

Abstract It is widely known that financial markets can become dangerously unstable, yet it is unclear why. Recent research has highlighted the possibility that endogenous hormones, in particular testosterone and cortisol, may critically influence traders' financial decision making. Here we show that cortisol, a hormone that modulates the response to physical or psychological stress, predicts instability in financial markets. Specifically, we recorded salivary levels of cortisol and testosterone in people participating in an experimental asset market (N = 142) and found that individual and aggregate levels of endogenous cortisol predict subsequent risk-taking and price instability. We then administered either cortisol (single oral dose of 100 mg hydrocortisone, N = 34) or testosterone (three doses of 10 g transdermal 1% testosterone gel over 48 hours, N = 41) to young males before they played an asset trading game. We found that both cortisol and testosterone shifted investment towards riskier assets. Cortisol appears to affect risk preferences directly, whereas testosterone operates by inducing increased optimism about future price changes. Our results suggest that changes in both cortisol and testosterone could play a destabilizing role in financial markets through increased risk taking behaviour, acting via different behavioural pathways.
MeSH term(s) Adolescent ; Adult ; Decision Making ; Female ; Games, Experimental ; Humans ; Hydrocortisone/physiology ; Investments ; Male ; Risk-Taking ; Saliva/metabolism ; Testosterone/physiology ; Young Adult
Chemical Substances Testosterone (3XMK78S47O) ; Hydrocortisone (WI4X0X7BPJ)
Language English
Publishing date 2015-07-02
Publishing country England
Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
ZDB-ID 2615211-3
ISSN 2045-2322 ; 2045-2322
ISSN (online) 2045-2322
ISSN 2045-2322
DOI 10.1038/srep11206
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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