What should you watch for?
The Nobel-prize-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman explains two factors that characterize good decisions:
- "well-calibrated confidence" (do I understand this investment as well as I think I do?)
- "correctly-anticipated regret" (how will I react if my analysis turns out to be wrong?).
To find out whether your confidence is well-calibrated, look in the mirrow and ask yourself: "What is the likelihood that my analysis is right?"
Think carefully through these questions:
- How much experience do I have? What is my track recrod with similar decisions in the past?
- What is the typical track record of other people who have tried this in the past?
- If I am buying, someone else is selling. How likely is it that I know something that this other person (or company) does not know?
- If I am selling, someone else is buying. How likely is it that I know something that this other person (or company) does not know?
- Have I calculated how much this investment needs to go up for me to break even after my taxes and costs of trading?
Next, look in the mirror to find out whether you are the kind of person who correctly anticipates your regret. Start by asking:
"Do I fully understand the consequences if my analysis turns out to be wrong?"
Answer that question by considering these points:
- If I am right, I could make a lot of money. But what if I'm wrong? Based on the historical performance of similar investments, how much could I lose?
- Do I have other investments that will tide me over if this decision turns out to be wrong? Do I already hold stocks, bonds, or funds with a proven record of going up when the kind of investment I'm considering goes down? Am I putting too much of my capital at risk with this new investment?
- When I tell myself, "You have a high tolerance for risk," how do I know? Have I ever lost a lot of money on an investment? How did it feel? Did I buy more, or did I bail out?
- Am I relying on my willpower alone to prevent me from panicking at the wrong time? Or have I controlled my own behaviour in advance by diversifying, signing an investment contract, and dollar-cost averaging?
Before you invest, you must ensure that you have realistically assessed your probability of being right and how you will react to the consequences of being wrong.
Ref: cc Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
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