Haste makes waste when you're investing

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#1
The Straits Times
Feb 12, 2012
Haste makes waste when you're investing

Avoid common pitfalls with a portfolio that factors in your goals and ability to take risks

Intuition often plays us out when it comes to investing. We buy when we should sell, or focus on red herrings. So are there ways to overcome such traps?

After a flood of research in the growing field of behavioural economics, we know the answer is yes, although doing the right thing with money involves recognition and discipline.

Many tenets of prudent financial decision-making can be found in the work of Professor Daniel Kahneman and his acolytes. His best-selling book, Thinking, Fast And Slow, opens up some new vistas in terms of human behaviour that can be applied to our worst investing mistakes.

Prof Kahneman, a psychologist who won a Nobel Prize in economic sciences in 2002, has turned classical economics on its head in many ways, noting that it is folly to engage in day trading or to think you have an advantage in picking securities. Investors do not always act in their own best interests and are consistently led astray by emotional motives and cognitive errors, he said. Overconfidence is a bugaboo.

'People have little idea, by and large, of the investment world,' he said. 'They are convinced they have an advantage.'

One of the most common errors investors commit, he has found, is making bad decisions simply because of the overriding fear of loss - an important concept of the so-called prospect theory that he pioneered with his fellow researcher, psychologist Amos Tversky, who died in 1996.

Investors will also 'anchor' to a target price for a security for arbitrary and irrational reasons, often holding the stock long after it should have been sold.

Instead of portraying investors as idealised rational beings who always act in their own best interests - often the case in standard financial economics - behavioural economics casts them as 'normal' people who chase biases that have little connection to the statistical truth or the right thing to do.

Our brains, in Prof Kahneman's view and according to neurological research, rely more on a so-called System 1 that processes information rapidly and intuitively than on a System 2 that is more analytical and deliberate.

One cognitive bias is called 'faulty framing'. Say you buy a stock at a certain price and it plummets. You are reluctant to sell because of the emotional distress of taking a loss. Because the loss is a paper one, you hold it in a protected mental account as something that still has hope, even if the market has decided otherwise.

Here are some other common errors that researchers have identified:

Misreading short-term results: Regarding what happens in the short term as predictive of a future outcome is a frequent mistake - for example, when an investor views last year's strong performance as a sign that a manager's hot streak will continue.

Most good runs are a matter of luck, Prof Kahneman said. 'If a manager had three or four good years, you're asking for trouble,' he said. 'Go with real statistics, not small samples.'

Trusting gut instincts: Intuitive insights have proved to be consistently unreliable as a basis for picking profitable investments.

Prof Kahneman suggests 'taking the outside view' and mistrusting your intuition.

Reacting to outside events: No doubt the euro zone mess, debt problems in the United States and other world calamities are threats to global investing. But such problems often involve too much information to process. Investors need to make decisions one at a time, in a manner that corresponds to their own goals.

Professor Meir Statman of Santa Clara University in California, the author of What Investors Really Want, said: 'We can overcome System 1 by employing critical thinking.' He added: 'Think like a scientist.'

Professors Kahneman and Statman have found that amateur investors get into the most trouble when they start trading actively, a situation in which they have no real advantage. They are likely to lose money, several studies have shown.

'In every trade, there is an idiot,' Prof Statman said. 'If you don't know who it is, it's you.'

While he does not begrudge investors the thrill of trading, he suggests limiting the activity. It might be all right to play the market, he notes, 'as long as it won't imperil your retirement'.

Most behavioural economists are wary of active management, which applies to buying mutual funds and other vehicles where professional managers are trying to time market conditions.

Even the best stock-pickers failed to foresee the consequences of the 2008 financial crisis. That is an additional shortcoming shared by most investors - the failure to anticipate and prevent damage from a worst-case situation. Market savants call this 'tail risk'.

'People are underinsured against extreme and unlikely possibilities,' Prof Kahneman said, citing Nassim Nicholas Taleb's book, The Black Swan, which examines highly improbable events.

Most behavioural finance experts counsel that for the majority of people, a passive investment approach is the wisest. Devise a portfolio that measures and limits the amount of risk you can afford to take, align it to your specific goals - college financing, retirement, estate building - and leave it alone.

Prof Statman recommends low-cost index funds. 'I just let them ride,' he said. Prof Kahneman suggests avoiding highly leveraged funds and keeping an eye on inflation. 'We need to be more systematic,' he said. 'We need to slow ourselves down.'

Reflection could be your greatest ally in avoiding investment folly. If you want to be successful in sidestepping System 1 tendencies, one of the best strategies is to shelve a hot investment idea for a week and think about it analytically - or employ a trusted adviser to analyse the idea carefully.

In this regard, perhaps an old proverb offers some of the best advice. Haste can indeed make waste.

New York Times
My Value Investing Blog: http://sgmusicwhiz.blogspot.com/
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#2
"Even the best stock-pickers failed to foresee the consequences of the 2008 financial crisis. That is an additional shortcoming shared by most investors - the failure to anticipate and prevent damage from a worst-case situation."
Unquote:
For me by now, i am not afraid of 2008. In fact i started my investment (23+ years ago) accepting principles based on BEAR/BULL cycles. But i am very afraid of what happened in 2009. So i am not afraid of falling knife but very afraid of when and where it will land. OUCH!
WB:-

1) Rule # 1, do not lose money.
2) Rule # 2, refer to # 1.
3) Not until you can manage your emotions, you can manage your money.

Truism of Investments.
A) Buying a security is buying RISK not Return
B) You can control RISK (to a certain level, hopefully only.) But definitely not the outcome of the Return.

NB:-
My signature is meant for psychoing myself. No offence to anyone. i am trying not to lose money unnecessary anymore.
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