Sunday, 8 August 2010

Knowing about the psychological biases is not enough. You must also have a strategy for overcoming them.



Battling Your Biases


Remember the day-trader cartoon in Chapter 1? The roller coaster called "The Day Trader" represents the modern investment environment. The roller coaster has dramatic highs and lows. As a modern-day investor, you can experience strong emotional highs and lows. This emotional roller coaster has a tendency to enhance your natural psychological biases. Ultimately, this can lead to bad investment decisions.

The previous chapter began the discussion of how to overcome your psychological biases. It introduced two strategies of exerting self-control: rules of thumb and envi­ronment control. This chapter proposes strategies for controlling your environment and gives you specific rules of thumb that focus you on investing for long-term wealth and on avoiding short-term pitfalls caused by decisions based on emotions.

The first strategy was proposed in Chapter 1: Understand the psychological biases. We have discussed many biases in this book. You may not remember each bias and how it affects you (due to cognitive dissonance and other memory biases—see Chapter 10), so reviewing them here should be beneficial. In fact, to help you make wise investments long after reading this book, you should re-familiarize yourself with these biases next month, next year, and every year.


STRATEGY 1: UNDERSTAND YOUR PSYCHOLOGICAL BIASES




In this book, there are three categories of psychological biases: not thinking clearly, letting emotions rule, and functioning of the brain. Let's review the biases in each category.

(a)  Not Thinking Clearly

Your past experiences can lead to specific behaviors that harm your wealth. For example, you are prone to attribute past investment success to your skill at investing. This leads to the psychological bias of overconfidence. Overconfidence causes you to trade too much and to take too much risk. As a consequence, you pay too much in commissions, pay too much in taxes, and are susceptible to big losses.

The attachment bias causes you to become emotionally attached to a security. You are emotionally attached to your parents, siblings, children, and close friends. This attachment causes you to focus on their good traits and deeds. You also tend to discount or ignore their bad traits and deeds. When you become emotionally attached to a stock, you also fail to recognize bad news about the company.

When taking an action is in your best interest, the endowment bias and status quo bias cause you to do nothing. When securities are given to you, you tend to keep them instead of changing them to an investment that meets your needs. You also procrastinate on making important decisions, like contributing to your 401(k) plan.

In the future, you should review these psychological biases.

(b)  Letting Emotions Rule

Emotions get in the way of making good investment decisions. For example, your desire to feel good about yourself—seeking pride— causes you to sell your winners too soon. Trying to avoid regret causes you to hold your losers too long. The consequences are that you sell the stocks that perform well and keep the stocks that perform poorly. This hurts your return and causes you to pay higher taxes.

When you are on a winning streak, you may feel like you are playing with the house's money. The feeling of betting with someone else's money causes you to take too much risk. On the other hand, losing causes emotional pain. The feeling of being snake bit causes you to want to avoid this emotional pain in the future. To do this, you avoid taking risks entirely by not owning any stocks. However, a diversified portfolio of stocks should be a part of everyone's total investment portfolio. Experiencing a loss also causes you to want to get even. Unfortunately, this desire to get even clouds your judgment and induces you to take risks you would not ordinarily take.

And finally, your need for social validation causes you to bring your investing interests into your social life. You like to talk about investing. You like to listen to others talk about investingOver time, you begin to misinterpret other people's opinions as investment fact. On an individual level, this leads to investment decisions based on rumor and emotions. On a societal level, this leads to price bubbles in our stock market.


(c) Functioning of the Brain


The manner in which the human brain functions can cause you to think in ways that induce problems. For example, people use mental accounting to compartmentalize individual investments and categorize costs and benefits. While mental accounting can help you exert self-control to not spend money you are saving, it also keeps you from properly diversifying. The consequence is that you assume more risk than necessary to achieve your desired return.

To avoid regret about previous decisions that did not turn out well, the brain filters the information you receive. This process, called cognitive dissonance, adjusts your memory about the information and changes how you recall your previous decision. Obviously, this will reduce your ability to properly evaluate and monitor your investment choices.

The brain uses shortcuts to reduce the complexity of analyzing information. These shortcuts allow the brain to generate an estimate of the answer before fully digesting all the available information. For example, the brain makes the assumption that things that share similar qualities are quite alike. Representativeness is judgment based on stereotypes. Furthermore, people prefer things that have some familiarity to them. However, these shortcuts also make it hard for you to correctly analyze new information, possibly leading to inaccurate conclusions. Consequently, you put too much faith in stocks of companies that are familiar to you or represent qualities you desire.

This review of the psychological biases should help you with the first strategy of understanding your psychological biases. However, as Figure 15.1 suggests, knowing about the biases is not enough. You must also have a strategy for overcoming them.



The Investment Environment.

"Y



THE EFFECTS OF YOUR PSYCHOLOGICAL BIASES (CONTINUED).
Psychological
Effect on

Table
Bias
Investment Behavior
Consequence
15.1

Get Even

Take too much risk

Susceptible to big


trying to break even
losses


Social Validation

Feel that it must be

Participate in a price

good if others are in-
bubble which ulti-


vesting in the security
mately causes you to buy high and sell low


Mental

Fail to diversify

Not receiving the

Accounting

highest return possible for the level of risk taken


Cognitive

Ignore information that

Reduces your ability to
Dissonance
conflicts with prior
evaluate and monitor


beliefs and decisions
your investment choices


Representativeness

Think things that seem

Purchase overpriced


similar must be alike.
stocks


So a good company must


be a goodinvestment.



Familiarity

Think companies that

Failure to diversify


you know seem better
and put too much


and safer
faith in the company in which you work



STRATEGY 2: KNOW WHY YOU ARE INVESTING


You should be aware of the reasons you are investing. Most investors largely overlook this simple step of the investing process, having only some vague notion of their investment goals: "I want a lot of money so that I can travel abroad when I retire." "I want to make the money to send my kids to college." Sometimes people think of vague goals in a negative form: "I don't want to be poor when I retire." These vague notions do little to give you investment direction. Nor do they help you avoid the psychological biases that inhibit good decision making. It is time to get specific. Instead of a vague notion of wanting to travel after retirement, be specific. Try


A minimum of $75,000 of income per year in retirement would allow me to make two international trips a year. Since I will receive $20,000 a year in Social Security and retirement benefits, I will need $55,000 in investment income. Investment earnings from $800,000 would generate the desired income. I want to retire in 10 years.


Having specific goals gives you many advantages. For example, by keeping your eye on the reason for the investing, you will


■     Focus on the long term and look at the "big picture"


■     Be able to monitor and measure your progress


■     Be able to determine if your behavior matches your goals


For example, consider the employees of Miller Brewing Company who were hoping to retire early (discussed in Chapter 11). They had all their 401(k) money invested in the company stock, and the price of the stock fell nearly 60%. When you lose 60%, it takes a 150% return to recover the losses. It could easily take the Miller employees many years to recover the retirement assets. What are the conse quences for these employees? Early retirement will probably not be an option.


Investing in only one company is very risky. You can earn great returns or suffer great losses. If the Miller employees had simply compared the specific consequences of their strategy to their specific investment goals, they would have identified the problem. In this type of situation, which option do you think is better?


A.  Invest the assets in a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds
that will allow a comfortable retirement in two years.


B.   Invest the assets in the company stock, which will either earn
a high return and allow a slightly more comfortable
retirement in two years, or suffer losses which will delay
retirement for seven years.


Whereas option A meets the goals, option B gambles five years of work for a chance to exceed the goal and is not much different than placing the money on the flip of a coin.


STRATEGY 3: HAVE QUANTITATIVE INVESTMENT CRITERIA


Having a set of quantitative investment criteria allows you to avoid investing on emotion, rumor, stories, and other psychological biases. It is not the intent of this book to recommend a specific investment strategy like value investing or growth investing. There are hundreds of books that describe how to follow a specific style of investing. Most of these books have quantitative criteria.


Here are some easy-to-follow investment criteria:


■    Positive earnings


■    Maximum P/E ratio of 50


■    Minimum sales growth of 15%


■    A minimum of five years of being traded publicly


If you are a value investor, then a P/E maximum of 20 may be more appropriate. A growth investor may set the P/E maximum at 80 and increase the sales growth minimum to 25%. You can also use criteria like profit margin and PEG ratio, or you can even look at whether the company is a market share leader in sales.


Just as it is important to have specific investing goals, it is important to write down specific investment criteria. Before buying a stock, compare the characteristics of the company to your criteria. If it doesn't meet your criteria, don't invest!


Consider the Klondike Investment Club of Buffalo, Wyoming, discussed in Chapter 7. The club's number one ranking stems in part from its making buy decisions only after an acceptable research report has been completed. Klondike's criteria have protected its members from falling prey to their psychological biases. On the other hand, the California Investors Club's lack of success is due partially to the lack of criteria. Its decision process leads to buy decisions that are ultimately controlled by emotion.


I am not suggesting that qualitative information is unimportant. Information on the quality of a company's management or the types of new products under development can be useful. If a stock meets your quantitative criteria, then you should next examine these quali tative factors.


STRATEGY 4: DIVERSIFY


The old adage in real estate is that there are three important criteria when buying property: location, location, location. The investment adage should be very similar: diversify, diversify, diversify.


It is not likely that you will diversify in a manner suggested by modern portfolio theory and discussed in Chapter 9. However, if you keep some simple diversification rules in mind, you can do well.


■   Diversify by owning many different types of stocks. You can be reasonably well diversified with 15 stocks that are from different industries and of different sizes. One diversified mutual fund would do it too. However, a portfoilio of 50 technology stocks is not a diversified portfolio, nor is one of five technology mutual funds.


■    Own very little of the company you work for. You already have your human capital invested in your employer—that is, your income is dependent on the company. So diversify your whole self by avoiding that company in your investments.


■    Invest in bonds, too. A diversified portfolio should also have some bonds or bond mutual funds in it.


Diversifying in this way helps you to avoid tragic losses that can truly affect your life. Additionally, diversification is a shield against the psychological biases of attachment and familiarity.



http://www.physcomments.org/THE-INVESTMENT-ENVIRONMENT/functioning-of-investment-choices-the-brain2.html

Bullbear Stock Investing Notes

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