Oman Daily Observer

The World Cup syndrome

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As the world’s most popular sport, football (soccer to Americans) is often a pillar of national identity and a source of collective pride. That is why the Fifa World Cup can trigger intense emotions in a way that no other sporting mega-event can. This year’s tournament in Qatar is no different.

The 1998 World Cup, which took place in France, is instructiv­e. A 2012 study identified a significan­t decline in France’s suicide rate during the month-long tournament and a dramatic 19.9 per cent decrease in the days following the French team’s matches. France ultimately won that cup, but one’s team does not need to win to provoke an emotional response. And in Brazil, heart attacks spiked during the 1998, 2002, 2006, and 2010 World Cups, particular­ly on days when the Brazilian team played.

Similarly, several studies have found that internatio­nal football tournament­s can significan­tly affect markets. A 2016 study found that the Italian team’s performanc­e has influenced domestic stock-market returns.

National-level sporting victories, the authors concluded, can produce a sense of euphoria among investors. Losses, on the other hand, tend to depress investors, particular­ly non-institutio­nal retail investors.

Another study showed that losses tend to have a bigger negative impact on stock markets in countries with relatively more successful national teams, such as Spain and the United Kingdom.

In countries with moderately successful teams, like Chile and Turkey, traders’ appetite for risk increased after a win. Expectatio­ns may have something to do with this. It is possible, the latter study’s authors concluded, that losses had a greater effect on Spain and the UK because local football fans had grown accustomed to their national teams winning.

In other words, the more you expect your team to lose, the more it will cheer you up when they win, and vice versa. Judging by their celebratio­ns, Saudis were clearly cheered by their team’s stunning victory over Argentina.

Football can also have a positive effect on economic perception­s. A 2006 study, based on telephone surveys conducted the day after every match played by Germany’s national team during that year’s World Cup, found that the team’s better-thanexpect­ed performanc­e boosted confidence among Germans.

According to the authors, these findings confirm that psychologi­cal factors drive much economic activity. The primary proponent of this view was British economist John Maynard Keynes, who famously anticipate­d the market effect of mob behavior, noting that “it may often profit the wisest to anticipate mob psychology rather than the real trend of events, and to ape unreason.” Keynes’s observatio­n that savvy financial speculator­s could profit from market irrational­ity driven by mob psychology is supported by a 2010 study that examined the effect of the World Cup on the US stock market. While no one can predict the outcome of every football match, the authors identified a consistent trend that savvy investors could exploit: because a large proportion of investors in any given country hold US stocks, the negative effect on that market is more pronounced. The average US market return during the World Cup, they found, declined by 2.6 per cent, compared to an average 1.2 per cent increase in comparable periods.

As the number of losing countries increases, the aggregate effect on the US stock market grows larger, resulting in a market slowdown. Given this trend, shrewd investors may want to decrease their US equity exposure during the Fifa World Cup period. But if many investors adopt this strategy and reduce their exposure to US stocks simultaneo­usly, a market decline could become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Another possibilit­y is to short stocks just before the games start, but that would only aggravate price drops and may even precipitat­e earlier declines.

World-cup-induced market irrational­ity is unlikely to disappear anytime soon.

The reason is that football fans are infamously impervious to the indisputab­le fact that whatever teams you support, and no matter how successful they are, they will all inevitably lose in the long run.

THE WORLD’S MOST-WATCHED SPORTING EVENT INSPIRES PASSIONATE, EMOTIONAL RESPONSES LIKE NO OTHER. IT CAN SAVE FOOTBALL FANS’ LIVES OR DRIVE THEM TO SUICIDE

 ?? ?? Raj Persaud
The writer is a psychiatri­st and author of The Mental Vaccine for Covid-19
Raj Persaud The writer is a psychiatri­st and author of The Mental Vaccine for Covid-19
 ?? AFP ?? A fan of Brazil reacts while watching the live broadcast of the Qatar 2022 World Cup Group G football match between Brazil and Switzerlan­d, at the Fifa Fan Fest in Copacabana beach, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. —
AFP A fan of Brazil reacts while watching the live broadcast of the Qatar 2022 World Cup Group G football match between Brazil and Switzerlan­d, at the Fifa Fan Fest in Copacabana beach, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. —

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