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Networks, Knowledge, and Nudges: Determinants of Retail Investor Compliance

Ioannis Petrakis*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

This paper studies the behavioral and structural determinants of retail investors’ engagement with FINRA Rule 4512, a light-touch intervention encouraging the voluntary designation of a trusted contact. Using microdata from the 2021 National Financial Capability Study, we show that fewer than 38% of eligible U.S. investors had ever adopted this safeguard, pointing to substantial frictions in precautionary financial behavior. We develop a behavioral framework in which adoption reflects bounded attention, financial capability, portfolio complexity, and social trust. Empirically, we analyze both naming a trusted contact and being named by others. To address endogeneity, we instrument financial literacy with exposure to mandatory high-school financial education. Financial literacy has a large causal effect on compliance, portfolio sophistication predicts both outcomes, and social capital strongly moderates these relationships. In low-trust environments, literacy weakly predicts or deters delegation; in high-trust regions, it powerfully amplifies adoption and peer recognition.
Original languageEnglish
Article number101168
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance
Volume50
Early online date4 Mar 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2026

Keywords

  • trusted contact
  • retail investing
  • financial exploitation
  • financial literacy
  • NFCS
  • Financial literacy
  • D53
  • G53
  • G11
  • G32
  • Financial exploitation
  • G14
  • D3
  • Trusted contact
  • Retail investing

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