Openness to Robot Financial Investment Recommendation Systems, among Users of a Hungarian Financial Portal
Pintér, Róbert
Racskó, Péter
Szörény Rab, Árpád
2025-08-06T08:32:04Z
2025-08-06T08:32:04Z
2025
1785-8860
hu_HU
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/31977
In this article, we primarily examine the indirect and direct openness to robot
recommendation systems based on a Hungarian survey conducted in 2019 on the financial
habits of readers of Portfolio.hu (an online economic portal). We briefly introduce the
broader theoretical background of our research (financial investment recommendation
systems) and the structure of our survey (questionnaire blocks and data collection).
Openness to both direct and indirect use (with a human advisor) of robot recommendation
systems was asked about and analyzed. Over 1,500 respondents completed our
questionnaire, and the connections between robot recommendation systems and other
variables e.g., place of residence, age, subscription to digital services, visibility settings in
social media and level of savings, were examined. In addition to the simple bivariate
analysis, we also carried out a cluster analysis. Our research shows that roughly one in six
respondents would be open on their own to a direct robot recommendation, however, many
are uncertain, and many would only use the service with the support of human advisors.
One of the most important results of our research is that young people, much the same as
older people, are not automatically open to a robot recommendation system. Based on our
results, it would be constructive to combine hard socio-demographic, digital cultural, and
financial factors to create better robot recommendation systems. However, it should be
considered that our research was conducted in Hungary with a target group more open to
savings and financial investment (hence the research results require further examination).
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Openness to Robot Financial Investment Recommendation Systems, among Users of a Hungarian Financial Portal