Intervention(s)
This study investigates whether presenting additional explanatory materials on top of the standard product brochure affects customers’ investment decisions when purchasing Equity-Linked Securities (ELS), a high risk financial product. Sixty branches are randomly assigned to four groups (A to D), with 15 branches per group. Arm A serves as the control and maintains business as usual, while Arms B, C, and D receive the interventions described below. All activities take place at the bank’s trust product sales counters. The study focuses on KRW denominated ELS sold during the intervention period whose underlying structure combines KOSPI200, S&P500, and Eurostoxx50. To comply with regulatory requirements for investment solicitation, the added materials are delivered uniformly by supplementing the standard brochure with an additional explanatory insert, and data are collected from transactions during the three month intervention window.
The first intervention addresses potential behavioral biases induced by the profit and loss (P&L) charts commonly used in bank presentations and emphasizes the salience of potential losses when customers consider subscribing to ELS. In existing brochures, the chart at times uses inconsistent or split vertical scales between gain and loss regions, which can lead investors to overestimate gains and underestimate risks. Such design can trigger probability misjudgments and create a dark nudge toward overstating upside and understating downside. The intervention therefore presents loss information first, corrects scale distortions by using consistent axes for gains and losses, and clarifies labels and annotations (for example, explicitly noting that “8.2 percent per annum” is an annualized rate and adding plain language explanations for states such as early redemption success or failure).
The second intervention provides a comparative table across ELS variants, highlighting that higher first barrier levels imply a lower likelihood of early redemption and therefore higher risk. For multiple underlying, high risk ELS, a higher barrier typically offers a higher fixed coupon yet comes with greater risk, and this trade off should be made explicit. Existing sales routines often rely on historical simulations for individual products and do not clearly convey the systematic relation between barrier levels and redemption probabilities. The insert therefore summarizes, under identical underlying and fee conditions, key items by first barrier level, namely 75, 80, 85, and 90. It presents the fixed coupon, the loss range, the barrier level, and the historical probability of first redemption in a single table for side by side comparison.
The third intervention introduces a comparative table between ELS and ELB/DLB. Whereas the second intervention compares barrier levels within ELS, the third contrasts ELS that are not principal protected with ELB/DLB that are principal protected, which are relatively safer except under extraordinary circumstances such as issuer default during a severe financial crisis. Previously, there was no explicit guideline requiring advisors to present principal protected alternatives alongside ELS. This intervention therefore presents, in one place, a comparison of fixed return, loss range, redemption conditions, underlying assets, and risk grades, enabling customers to clearly understand the risk and return differences between ELS and ELB/DLB.