Abstract
The goal of this research was to look into the role of investors' feelings and overconfidence in mediating the link between investor personal traits and investment choices in Iraqi stock market businesses. A questionnaire was circulated and collected for 300 persons among actual and legal investors in Iraq in order to accomplish this aim, with 242 healthy questionnaires received. The outcomes of testing the hypotheses revealed that investors' judgments are influenced by their age and experience. Gender and education, on the other hand, have little impact on investment choices. Furthermore, the findings of this research suggest that investors' moods, as well as investors' overconfidence, might impact the way they make decisions. However, these two variables, namely investor feelings and overconfidence, are unable to mediate the association between demographic factors and investment decisions.