Tuesday, 12 May 2020

The challenge lies in trying to be above average in assessing the future. Why is that so hard?

First of all, forecasting is a competitive arena. The argument for the difficulty of out-forecasting
others is similar to the argument for market efficiency (and thus the limitations of active
management).

  • Thousands of others are trying, too, and they’re not “empty suits.” Many of them are educated, intelligent, numerate, hard-working, highly motivated and able to access vast amounts of data and computing power. 
  • So by definition it shouldn’t be easy to be better than the average.


In addition, since economics is imprecise, unscientific and inconsistent in its functioning,  there can’t be a method or process for forecasting that works consistently. 

  • To illustrate randomness, I say that if, when I graduated from business school, I was offered a huge budget, an army of PhDs and lavish financial incentives to predict the coin toss before each Sunday’s football games, I would have been a flop. 
  • No one can succeed in predicting things that are heavily influenced by randomness and otherwise inconsistent.

So forecasting is difficult for a large number of reasons, including

  • our limited understanding of the processes that will produce the future, 
  • their imprecise nature, 
  • the lack of historical precedent, 
  • the unpredictability of people’s behavior and 
  • the role of randomness, and 
these difficulties are exacerbated by today’s unusual circumstances.



Reference:

In investing, uncertainty is a given – how we deal with it will be critical. Read Howard Marks’s latest memo, in which he discusses the value of understanding the limitations of our foresight and “investing scared.”

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