Showing posts with label recency bias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recency bias. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 November 2025

The Biggest Enemy in Investing is Yourself

 

Behavioural Finance - The Biggest Enemy in Investing is Yourself

Your opening statement is the core truth of behavioural finance. While we often look for external villains—volatile markets, economic downturns, bad advice—the most significant source of investment error is our own ingrained psychological biases.


1. The Core Conflict: Man vs. "Rational Economic Man"

  • Traditional Finance (The "Rational" Model): This is the old paradigm. It assumes that investors are "rational actors" who:

    • Process all available information logically and without emotion.

    • Make decisions solely to maximize their wealth (utility).

    • Are consistent in their risk tolerance.

    • This model is elegant and forms the basis of theories like the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH), but it's a poor description of how people actually behave.

  • Behavioural Finance (The "Realistic" Model): Pioneered by psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky (Nobel Prize, 2002), this field acknowledges that investors are "normal," not always rational. They are:

    • Influenced by emotions (fear, greed, regret).

    • Use mental shortcuts (heuristics) that often lead to errors.

    • Systematically prone to cognitive biases that distort judgment.

The central insight is that these irrational behaviors are not random; they are predictable and systematic. By understanding them, we can defend against them.


2. Deep Dive: Recency Bias (The Party Effect)

Your notes provide a perfect case study. Let's break down the "Party Effect" and its implications.

What it is: Recency Bias is the tendency to weigh recent events more heavily than earlier ones when making decisions. Our brains are wired to believe that what happened yesterday will continue to happen tomorrow.

The Party Analysis - Why It's So Powerful:

The example of the four guests is brilliant because it shows that the exact same investment (the S&P 500 fund) can produce entirely different realities and emotions for different people, based solely on their entry point.

  • Guest 1 (30 months, +12.28%): Has lived through a full cycle. While uncomfortable with the recent downturn, their overall experience is positive. They are likely to stay invested.

  • Guest 10 (21 months, +1.36%): Feels frustrated. They missed the big early gains and have seen their profits evaporate. They are on the fence, susceptible to selling on a further dip.

  • Guest 19 (12 months, -21.53%): Is in a state of panic and regret. Their entire experience is negative. They believe "the market is a terrible place" and are highly likely to sell to stop the pain, potentially locking in losses at the bottom.

  • Guest 25 (6 months, -11.42%): Also panicked, but may hold on slightly longer, hoping to "break even." Their entire perspective is framed by the recent bear market.

The Dangerous Consequences:

  1. Buying High, Selling Low: This is the ultimate investor sin, and Recency Bias is its primary driver.

    • During a bull market (everyone is making money), the recent past is positive. Greed and FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) take over, leading people to buy after prices have already risen significantly.

    • During a bear market (prices are falling), the recent past is negative. Fear and panic set in, leading people to sell after prices have already fallen, crystallizing their losses.

  2. The "This Time is Different" Mentality: Recency Bias fuels the belief that current market conditions (a boom or a bust) are a "new normal" and that historical patterns no longer apply. This leads to a abandonment of long-term strategy.


3. Other Critical Biases and Heuristics

Beyond Recency Bias, here are other common enemies in the investing psyche:

  • Overconfidence: We tend to overestimate our own knowledge, skill, and ability to predict the future. This leads to excessive trading, under-diversification, and ignoring contrary evidence. (Mentioned in the Yale lecture).

  • Confirmation Bias: We actively seek out information that confirms our existing beliefs and ignore or dismiss information that contradicts them. An investor who buys a stock will then only read positive news about it.

  • Loss Aversion (from Prospect Theory): This is a foundational concept. The pain of losing $100 is psychologically about twice as powerful as the pleasure of gaining $100. This makes us irrationally hold onto losing investments (hoping to avoid realizing the loss) and sell winning investments too early (to "lock in" a gain).

  • Anchoring: We rely too heavily on the first piece of information we receive (the "anchor"). For example, an investor might fixate on the high price a stock once reached ($150) and refuse to sell it at $80, even if the fundamentals have deteriorated, because $80 seems "low" compared to the anchor.

  • Herd Mentality: The tendency to follow the actions of a large group, even if it's irrational. This drives asset bubbles and crashes.


4. How to Fight Your Inner Enemy: A Practical Guide

The notes correctly state that this is the "deadliest of all traps." Overcoming it requires a systematic defense.

  1. Educate Yourself: This is the most powerful weapon. You don't need to become a professional trader, but you must understand the fundamental principles of investing (what is a stock? a bond? what is diversification? what is a market cycle?) and, crucially, the principles of behavioural finance itself. Knowing these biases by name allows you to spot them in your own thinking.

  2. Create a Rules-Based Plan (An Investment Policy Statement): You must make your crucial decisions when you are thinking clearly, not in the heat of the moment. Your plan should define:

    • Your long-term goals (retirement, a house, etc.).

    • Your asset allocation (what percentage in stocks, bonds, etc.).

    • Clear rules for rebalancing (e.g., "I will rebalance my portfolio back to my target allocation every 12 months").

    • This plan acts as a "circuit breaker" for your emotions.

  3. Embrace Dollar-Cost Averaging: This technique, where you invest a fixed amount of money at regular intervals (e.g., monthly), automatically fights Recency Bias. You buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high, smoothing out your entry point and preventing you from trying to "time the market."

  4. Hire the Right Kind of Advisor: The notes are emphatic and correct here.

    • Fiduciary Duty is Non-Negotiable: A fiduciary is legally and ethically obligated to put your interests first. This removes the "conflict of interest" variable. Many advisors at large wirehouses (like those mentioned: Merrill Lynch, etc.) are not held to a fiduciary standard and may be incentivized to sell you products that are good for them.

    • Your Advisor as a "Behavioral Coach": A good fiduciary advisor's greatest value may not be stock-picking, but being the voice of reason when you are panicking or becoming greedy. They help you stick to your plan.

Conclusion

Behavioural Finance doesn't just make us smarter investors; it makes us more self-aware individuals. It teaches us humility, patience, and the value of discipline. The market's volatility is a given. Your reaction to it is the variable you can control. By understanding that your biggest enemy is the collection of biases and emotional reflexes within you, you can build the defenses necessary to achieve long-term success.

In short: Master the market by first mastering yourself.



The Story:  Welcome to the party

When describing the stock market each participant sees their portfolio’s performance from their perspective only and thus they are always “right” which leads to what I call The Party Effect or what Financial Behaviorist call the Recency Bias.

Imagine that you attended a party hosted by your investment advisor and that in addition to you, also in attendance were several other clients. As you go around the room and meet people you learn that everyone at the party owns the exact same S&P 500 index mutual fund. I use the S&P 500 for this tale because by many measures it has historically produce an average rate of return of about 12% and as many people know, and now you know as well, it represents what many investors call “the stock market.” The question then is would everyone have the same rate of return at this party? Of course the answer is, no they would not. If they started at the same time they would but since people invest or come into the life of the investment advisor at different times, the answer is no.

Let’s tighten up the party attendee list and invite only 30 guests. For simplicity, let’s assume that Guest 1 purchased the fund 30 months ago, that Guest 2 purchased it 29 months ago, that Guest 3 purchased it 28 months ago, etc. What would the guests discuss? What would be their perspectives of the stock market?

In order to determine what the guests would discuss and how they would evaluate their performance we need to have some data in the form of monthly rates of return. So we need to develop a monthly rate of return for 30 months to see what they see. Again, for simplicity, assume that for the first 18 months the fund goes up 3% per month and for the next 12 months it goes down 2% per month. Please note that I didn’t pick this sequence of numbers randomly. I have a purpose to this. This particular sequence approximates how the stock market moves in terms of bull and bear market duration and after 30 months returns approximately 12%; 12.28% to be exact. This sequence of numbers is a good sequence to illustrate The Party Effect or Recency Bias. We can characterize the first 18 months as the bull market phase of the 30-month cycle and the last 12 months as the bear market phase of the 30-month cycle.

To illustrate The Party Effect lets focus on 4 guests and see how they describe the stock market. Let’s look at guests 1, 10, 19 and 25. I picked these 4 because readers of this tale can relate in some form or another to one of these 4.

- Guest 1 started 30 months ago, at the beginning of the bull market phase, and his rate of return is 12.28% for the entire 30-month cycle. He enjoyed the ride up for 18 months and now the ride down for the last 12.

-  Guest 10 started 21 months ago, halfway through the bull market phase, and his rate of return is 1.36%    for the 21-month period he has been invested.

-  Guest 19 started 12 months ago, at the beginning of the bear market phase, and his rate of return is  -21.53% for the 12-month period he has been invested.

-  Finally, Guest 25 started 6 months ago, halfway through the bear market phase, and his rate of return is  –11.42 for the 6-month period he has been invested.

These 4 guests experienced entirely different rate of return outcomes and view their portfolios and thus the stock market completely different. All 4 are correct. All 4 are right and yet they couldn’t possibly have more divergent outcomes. If they don’t have a complete picture of the stock market, they can get themselves in trouble. The difference between the best performing portfolio that is up 12.28% and the worst performing portfolio that is down 21.53% is an astounding 33.81%. Is this too obvious? You may say, of course they have different outcomes, they started at different times but that is not the point. The point is that stock market investing will always produce different outcomes. One guest started at the worst time possible. Another guest started at the best possible time. How they look at the past determines how they see the present. Most importantly, it will determine how they will act going forward.

The Party Effect simply states that stock market participants evaluate their portfolio performance based on their perspective and their perspective only. They do not see the market as it is but as they are. Without an expert understanding of how the stock market works, this leads to incorrect conclusions that ultimately lead to incorrect decisions. The field of Behavioral Finance (BF) has shown time and time again that people have variable risk profiles. BF demonstrates that fear is a stronger emotion than greed. This means that in our simple 4 guest example, Guests 3 and 4 are more likely to exit the stock market at just the wrong time since their recent, thus Recency Bias, experience is one of losing money. It means that Guest 1 and 2 are more likely to stay invested, thus catching the next wave up that is likely to follow. All 4 have intellectual access to the events of the last 30 months. All 4 can educate themselves on the stock market. However, their particular situation is so biased by recent events that the facts are unimportant. They behave irrationally. I have witnessed this irrational behavior throughout my career. No one is immune, even advisors.

Wednesday, 19 November 2025

Behavioural Finance. The biggest enemy in investing is yourself.

 Behavioural Finance. The biggest enemy in investing is yourself.

Elaboration of Section 29

This section introduces one of the most critical yet overlooked aspects of investing: Behavioral Finance. This field studies how psychological influences and biases cause investors to act irrationally, often to their own severe financial detriment. The central thesis is that your own psychology is a greater threat to your success than any market crash.

1. The Core Concept: The "Party Effect" or Recency Bias
The section uses a powerful allegory, the "Party Effect," to explain a common behavioral bias known as Recency Bias. This is the tendency to weigh recent events more heavily than earlier ones and to extrapolate recent trends into the future indefinitely.

  • The Party Scenario: Imagine 30 guests at a party. Each bought the same S&P 500 index fund, but they started investing in consecutive months over a 30-month period.

  • The Market Cycle: The first 18 months were a bull market (prices rising 3% per month), followed by 12 months of a bear market (prices falling 2% per month). Over the full 30 months, the fund returned a healthy 12%.

  • The Divergent Perspectives:

    • Guest 1 (started 30 months ago): Sees a +12% return. He is content.

    • Guest 10 (started 21 months ago): Sees a +1.36% return. He is disappointed.

    • Guest 19 (started 12 months ago): Sees a -21.53% return. He is panicked and believes the stock market is a terrible place.

    • Guest 25 (started 6 months ago): Sees a -11.42% return. He is fearful.

  • The Lesson: All four guests are looking at the exact same investment, but their personal experience (their "recent" history) gives them a completely different, and often incorrect, perception of the market. This bias leads them to make poor decisions—the losing investors are likely to sell in a panic at the worst possible time, while the winners may become overconfident.

2. The Consequences: How Biases Destroy Wealth
Behavioral finance shows that these ingrained biases lead to predictable and costly errors:

  • Selling Low and Buying High: Driven by fear (during downturns) and greed (during bubbles).

  • Chasing Performance: Buying into hot sectors or funds after they have already seen massive gains, only to be caught in the subsequent crash.

  • Overconfidence: Believing you know more than the market, leading to excessive trading and risk-taking.

3. The Solution: Expertise and Self-Awareness
The section concludes that the only way to overcome these powerful psychological traps is through one of two paths:

  • Become an Expert Yourself: By deeply understanding how the market works and being aware of your own biases, you can learn to manage your emotions and stick to a disciplined strategy. You recognize market downturns as opportunities, not threats.

  • Hire a True Expert (and Be Able to Identify One): If you cannot become an expert, you must find a trustworthy, knowledgeable advisor who can act as a rational guide. However, the section warns that this is difficult if you lack the expertise to judge their competence and integrity in the first place.

4. The Yale University Lecture
The link to the Yale lecture provides an academic foundation for these ideas, covering concepts like:

  • Prospect Theory: How people value gains and losses differently, leading to irrational decision-making.

  • Overconfidence: The tendency to overestimate one's own knowledge and ability.


Summary of Section 29

Section 29 argues that the most dangerous enemy an investor faces is their own psychology, which leads to systematic errors like Recency Bias—the tendency to make decisions based on recent experiences rather than long-term facts.

  • The Core Problem: Investors' perceptions are distorted by their personal entry point into the market (the "Party Effect"). This leads to emotionally-driven decisions, such as selling in a panic after recent losses or buying into manias after recent gains.

  • The Field of Study: Behavioral Finance explains these irrational but predictable patterns.

  • The Ultimate Challenge: You cannot avoid these psychological traps by abdicating responsibility. You must either:

    1. Become an expert to manage your own behavior, or

    2. Develop the expertise to identify and hire a truly competent, ethical advisor to do it for you.

In essence, this section teaches that winning the inner game is a prerequisite for winning the financial game. No amount of financial analysis will help an investor who cannot control their own fear and greed. The intelligent investor must not only analyze companies but also conduct a ruthless self-analysis to overcome the biases that doom the majority to failure.

Saturday, 26 October 2019

iCapital.Biz Berhad price chart since listing




iCapital.biz performance over the last 14 years

iCapital.biz was listed at the end of 2005 with a NAV of around RM 1.00.

On 24th October, 2019, its NAV was RM 3.21 and its share price on 25th October, 2019 was 2.42 per share.

Over the last 14 years, it gave 1 dividend of 9 sen per share.

Over the course of the last 14 years your investment in icapital.biz grew from $1.00 to $3.30, its compound annual growth rate, or its overall return, is 8.90%.


Share price fluctuations of iCapital.biz over the last 14 years

iCapital.biz traded at a premium to its NAV in its early years of listing. It was trading at high price of RM 2.48 in the early days of January 2008.

Its price crashed with the Global Financial Crisis. The premium to its NAV disappeared and it was trading at a huge discount to its NAV when its share price crashed to 1.06 in October 2009.

Since then, its share price has climbed upwards steadily over the years and always trading at a discount to its NAV.

On 25.10.2019, icapital.biz is priced at RM 2.42 per share.



So, who are the winners or losers in this stock?

The initial shareholders who hold onto to their shares until today from listing are obvious winners.

The buyers of this stock in and around January 2008 were obvious losers. They would have bought at very high prices and at huge premium to its NAV too.

However, for those who held onto this stock even when bought in January 2008 for the long term and who continued with a dollar cost averaging strategy over the years, they might still be winners overall.  This requires discipline and a firm investing philosophy.

Those who bought into icapital.biz from October 2008 when its price was the lowest and at any time subsequently and held till today are also winners, provided they bought below 2.42 per share.

Yes, there are obvious winners in this stock but they have to be in this stock long term and have done continuous buying of the stock over time (dollar cost averaging) when the price was obviously not too high.



Are there more winners or losers in this stock?

I believe the majority of players in the stock market are short-term traders. As traders, they are in at the time when the stock enjoys some popularity and they are out when the stock appears disfavoured. 

Thus, they are likely to be in the stock at the time when the prices were high and out when the prices dropped; they bought high and sold low.

I think icapital.biz is no different from other stocks in the Bursa. Though over the long term, icapital.biz has delivered positive returns, for those who have bought and sold icapital.biz stocks over the years, on an aggregate, there were more losers than winners.


The risk in investing is not the stock.  It is the person staring back at you in the mirror:  YOURSELF.




Suggested further reading:
https://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2019/04/the-party-effect-or-recency-bias.html
No One is Immune from The Party Effect or Recency Bias









Wednesday, 3 April 2019

No One is Immune from The Party Effect or Recency Bias

What is the Recency Bias?

When describing the stock market each participant sees their portfolio’s performance 
  • from their perspective only and 
  • thus they are always “right”.
This leads to what I call The Party Effect or what Financial Behaviorist call the Recency Bias.



An illustration


Historical average rate of return is 12%.  What does this imply? Would everyone have the same rate of return?


Imagine that you attended a party hosted by your investment advisor and that in addition to you, also in attendance were several other clients. As you go around the room and meet people you learn that everyone at the party owns the exact same S&P 500 index mutual fund. I use the S&P 500 for this tale because by many measures it has historically produce an average rate of return of about 12% and as many people know, and now you know as well, it represents what many investors call “the stock market.” 


The question then is would everyone have the same rate of return at this party? 
  • Of course the answer is, no they would not. 
  • If they started at the same time they would but since people invest or come into the life of the investment advisor at different times, the answer is no.

A party with only 30 guests, specially selected for illustration.


Let’s tighten up the party attendee list and invite only 30 guests. For simplicity, let’s assume that Guest 1 purchased the fund 30 months ago, that Guest 2 purchased it 29 months ago, that Guest 3 purchased it 28 months ago, etc. 

What would the guests discuss? What would be their perspectives of the stock market?  In order to determine what the guests would discuss and how they would evaluate their performance we need to have some data in the form of monthly rates of return. So we need to develop a monthly rate of return for 30 months to see what they see. 



A 30-month cycle: 18 months bull market phase and 12 months bear market phase 



Again, for simplicity, assume that for the first 18 months the fund goes up 3% per month and for the next 12 months it goes down 2% per month. 

  • Please note that I didn’t pick this sequence of numbers randomly. I have a purpose to this. 
  • This particular sequence approximates how the stock market moves in terms of bull and bear market duration and after 30 months returns approximately 12%; 12.28% to be exact. 
  • This sequence of numbers is a good sequence to illustrate The Party Effect or Recency Bias. 
  • We can characterize the first 18 months as the bull market phase of the 30-month cycle and the last 12 months as the bear market phase of the 30-month cycle.


Focus on 4 guests (1, 10, 19 and 25) to illustrate the Party Effect


To illustrate The Party Effect lets focus on 4 guests and see how they describe the stock market. Let’s look at guests 1, 10, 19 and 25. I picked these 4 because readers of this tale can relate in some form or another to one of these 4.

  • Guest 1 started 30 months ago, at the beginning of the bull market phase, and his rate of return is 12.28% for the entire 30-month cycle. He enjoyed the ride up for 18 months and now the ride down for the last 12.
  • Guest 10 started 21 months ago, halfway through the bull market phase, and his rate of return is 1.36%  for the 21-month period he has been invested.
  • Guest 19 started 12 months ago, at the beginning of the bear market phase, and his rate of return is  -21.53% for the 12-month period he has been invested.
  • Finally, Guest 25 started 6 months ago, halfway through the bear market phase, and his rate of return is  –11.42 for the 6-month period he has been invested.
These 4 guests experienced entirely different rate of return outcomes and view their portfolios and thus the stock market completely different. 
  • All 4 are correct. 
  • All 4 are right and yet they couldn’t possibly have more divergent outcomes. 
  • If they don’t have a complete picture of the stock market, they can get themselves in trouble. 
  • The difference between the best performing portfolio that is up 12.28% and the worst performing portfolio that is down 21.53% is an astounding 33.81%. 

Stock market investing will always produce different outcomes


Is this too obvious? You may say, of course they have different outcomes, they started at different times but that is not the point.  The point is that stock market investing will always produce different outcomes. 

  • One guest started at the worst time possible. 
  • Another guest started at the best possible time. 
  • How they look at the past determines how they see the present. 
  • Most importantly, it will determine how they will act going forward.


Pitfalls and dangers of the Party Effect or Recency Bias


The Party Effect simply states that stock market participants evaluate their portfolio performance based on their perspective and their perspective only. 

They do not see the market as it is but as they are. 

Without an expert understanding of how the stock market works, this leads to incorrect conclusions that ultimately lead to incorrect decisions. 


The field of Behavioral Finance (BF) has shown time and time again that people have variable risk profiles. BF demonstrates that fear is a stronger emotion than greed. 
  • This means that in our simple 4 guest example, Guests 3 and 4 are more likely to exit the stock market at just the wrong time since their recent, thus Recency Bias, experience is one of losing money. 
  • It means that Guest 1 and 2 are more likely to stay invested, thus catching the next wave up that is likely to follow. 


No one is immune to the Party Effect or Recency Bias


All 4 have intellectual access to the events of the last 30 months.  All 4 can educate themselves on the stock market. 
  • However, their particular situation is so biased by recent events that the facts are unimportant. They behave irrationally. 
  • I have witnessed this irrational behavior throughout my career. 
  • No one is immune, even advisors.


To overcome:  be an expert on the stock market yourself.


There are ways to combat The Party Effect trap but it is the deadliest of all the stock market traps that I know. Few can overcome it.  

The only sure way to overcome it is to
  • become an expert on the stock market yourself, 
  • learn to manage your emotions, and 
  • then either manage your own money or hire competent managers that you recognize are expert in their chosen investment discipline. 

However, if you hire an expert on the stock market you have not solved the problem if you do not have expertise. Let me repeat this sentence and highlight it. If you hire an expert on the stock market you have not solved The Party Effect trap if you do not have expertise yourself. 


When you hire an expert on the stock market without being an expert yourself all you have done is added complexity to a complex problem. 
  • You have inserted another variable between you and the stock market. 
  • You now have three variables to worry about, the stock market, your advisor and yourself. 
Without expertise you have no way of knowing if your advisor is an expert. You are in an endless loop. 
  • You are in a recursive situation. Just like we ask, what came first the chicken or the egg? 
  • The Party Effect asks, how do I hire an expert without being an expert myself?

If you are unwilling to become an expert on the stock market you must find a way to solve The Party Effect trap? 

Sunday, 13 November 2016

Recency Bias or the Party Effect

Recency Bias or the Party Effect
Overview

The Party Effect or Recency Bias is where stock market participants evaluate their portfolio performance based on recent results or on their perspective of recent results and make incorrect conclusions that ultimately lead to incorrect decisions about how the stock market behaves. This is a very important concept to understand. Let’s set the stage for an illustration of how this happens.

Examples

A Party Tale

“You’re Right”

One of my favorite life lessons centers around President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, also known as FDR. FDR had many strengths but I think his greatest was his ability to recognize that things are not always black and white. I think his ability to see the big picture as well as discern the subtleties of a situation is what made him such an effective leader and brought out the best in others.

In one well known FDR story, he asks one of his trusted advisors what he thinks about a particular situation and after he listens to the advisor, FDR replies “You’re Right.” Not long after FDR asks another of his trusted advisors for his opinion on the same matter and this advisor gives the exact opposite recommendation from the first advisor to which FDR once again replies “You’re Right.”

At hearing FDR’s reply to the second advisor one of FDR’s closest advisors that had listened to FDR’s response to both advisors, points out the obvious contradiction to which FDR replies “You’re Also Right.”

Much can be learned from what at first appears to be FDR’s flippant and contradictory remarks to his advisors. However, FDR was far wiser. FDR understood that all three advisors were in fact right. They were just right from their perspective. But they didn’t have a view of the big picture. The contrast between FDR’s perspective of the entire situation compared to the trusted advisor’s perspective of a narrow part of the situation is what creates the dichotomy. The stock market works much the same way.

A different example would be the poem about the six blind men and the elephant. Each of the six blind men is asked to describe an elephant. Their perceptions lead to misinterpretation because they each describe the elephant differently depending on which part of the elephant they touch. One touches the side and describes the elephant like a wall. The other the tusk and describes the elephant as a spear. The next touches the trunk and describes a snake. The next the knee and describes a tree. The next an ear and describes a fan. Finally the last touches the tail and describes the elephant like a rope.

This tale is about the stock market and how investors relate to the stock market.The stock market can be viewed as FDR or the elephant while investors or participants in the stock market can be viewed as the advisors or the blind men.When describing the stock market each participant sees their portfolio’s performance from their perspective only and thus they are always “right” which leads to what I call The Party Effect or what Financial Behaviorist call the Recency Bias.

Imagine that you attended a party hosted by your investment advisor and that in addition to you, also in attendance were several other clients. As you go around the room and meet people you learn that everyone at the party owns the exact same S&P 500 index mutual fund. I use the S&P 500 for this tale because by many measures it has historically produce an average rate of return of about 12% and as many people know, and now you know as well, it represents what many investors call “the stock market.” The question then is would everyone have the same rate of return at this party? Of course the answer is, no they would not. If they started at the same time they would but since people invest or come into the life of the investment advisor at different times, the answer is no.

Let’s tighten up the party attendee list and invite only 30 guests. For simplicity, let’s assume that Guest 1 purchased the fund 30 months ago, that Guest 2 purchased it 29 months ago, that Guest 3 purchased it 28 months ago, etc. What would the guests discuss? What would be their perspectives of the stock market?


In order to determine what the guests would discuss and how they would evaluate their performance we need to have some data in the form of monthly rates of return. So we need to develop a monthly rate of return for 30 months to see what they see. Again, for simplicity, assume that for the first 18 months the fund goes up 3% per month and for the next 12 months it goes down 2% per month. Please note that I didn’t pick this sequence of numbers randomly. I have a purpose to this. This particular sequence approximates how the stock market moves in terms of bull and bear market duration and after 30 months returns approximately 12%; 12.28% to be exact. This sequence of numbers is a good sequence to illustrate The Party Effect or Recency Bias. We can characterize the first 18 months as the bull market phase of the 30-month cycle and the last 12 months as the bear market phase of the 30-month cycle.

To illustrate The Party Effect lets focus on 4 guests and see how they describe the stock market. Remember the FDR and elephant example from the start of this tale. Let’s look at guests 1, 10, 19 and 25. I picked these 4 because readers of this tale can relate in some form or another to one of these 4.

- Guest 1 started 30 months ago, at the beginning of the bull market phase, and his rate of return is 12.28% for the entire 30-month cycle. He enjoyed the ride up for 18 months and now the ride down for the last 12.

-  Guest 10 started 21 months ago, halfway through the bull market phase, and his rate of return is 1.36%    for the 21-month period he has been invested.

-  Guest 19 started 12 months ago, at the beginning of the bear market phase, and his rate of return is  -21.53% for the 12-month period he has been invested.

-  Finally, Guest 25 started 6 months ago, halfway through the bear market phase, and his rate of return is  –11.42 for the 6-month period he has been invested.

These 4 guests experienced entirely different rate of return outcomes and view their portfolios and thus the stock market completely different. All 4 are correct. All 4 are right and yet they couldn’t possibly have more divergent outcomes. If they don’t have a complete picture of the stock market, like the elephant, they can get themselves in trouble. The difference between the best performing portfolio that is up 12.28% and the worst performing portfolio that is down 21.53% is an astounding 33.81%. Is this too obvious? You may say, of course they have different outcomes, they started at different times but that is not the point. The point is that stock market investing will always produce different outcomes. One guest started at the worst time possible. Another guest started at the best possible time. How they look at the past determines how they see the present. Most importantly, it will determine how they will act going forward.

The Party Effect simply states that stock market participants evaluate their portfolio performance based on their perspective and their perspective only. They do not see the market as it is but as they are. Without an expert understanding of how the stock market works, this leads to incorrect conclusions that ultimately lead to incorrect decisions. The field of Behavioral Finance (BF) has shown time and time again that people have variable risk profiles. BF demonstrates that fear is a stronger emotion than greed. This means that in our simple 4 guest example, Guests 3 and 4 are more likely to exit the stock market at just the wrong time since their recent, thus Recency Bias, experience is one of losing money. It means that Guest 1 and 2 are more likely to stay invested, thus catching the next wave up that is likely to follow. All 4 have intellectual access to the events of the last 30 months. All 4 can educate themselves on the stock market. However, their particular situation is so biased by recent events that the facts are unimportant. They behave irrationally. I have witnessed this irrational behavior throughout my career. No one is immune, even advisors.

There are ways to combat The Party Effect trap but it is the deadliest of all the stock market traps that I know. Few can overcome it. The only sure way to overcome it is to become an expert on the stock market yourself, learn to manage your emotions, and then either manage your own money or hire competent managers that you recognize are expert in their chosen investment discipline. However, if you hire an expert on the stock market you have not solved the problem if you do not have expertise. Let me repeat this sentence and highlight it. If you hire an expert on the stock market you have not solved The Party Effect trap if you do not have expertise yourself. When you hire an expert on the stock market without being an expert yourself all you have done is added complexity to a complex problem. You have inserted another variable between you and the stock market. You now have three variables to worry about, the stock market, your advisor and yourself. Without expertise you have no way of knowing if your advisor is an expert. You are in an endless loop. You are in a recursive situation. Just like we ask, what came first the chicken or the egg? The Party Effect asks, how do I hire an expert without being an expert myself?

If you are unwilling to become an expert on the stock market you must find a way to solve The Party Effect trap? How do you do it? As a first step I suggest you read An Expert Tale to make sure the person you hire is in fact an expert and then hire them. The original intent of my Financial Tales project was to educate my kids and others I love. With that as a backdrop, this means I highly recommend you avoid dealing with any advisor that does not have a fiduciary relationship with you the client. Why, because you are adding a 4th variable to an already complex situation. You are adding the ever present conflict of interest that every non-fiduciary advisor has with their client. This 4th variable makes a successful outcome all but impossible. I recognize that these words are harsh but I believe your odds of success drop dramatically once you introduce the non-fiduciary variable. I don’t know what the future holds, but today you must avoid conflicted advisors at firms such as Merrill Lynch, Smith Barney, Morgan Stanley, etc. I expect that the non-fiduciary model of providing people with investment advice based on the size of the advertising budget will go the way of the dinosaur, but for as long as it exists, you must avoid this ilk of advisors.

What is the second step to avoiding The Party Effect trap? There is no second step. You either develop investment expertise or you learn to recognize experts and hire them. You can’t avoid or abdicate this charge. You must embrace your responsibility or you will suffer or those you love will suffer. It behooves the reader to invest their time in what is one of the most important decisions they will ever make and must make every day.



http://www.wikinvest.com/wiki/Recency_bias