Recently I
wrote about “why you still own it.” Now
I think it’s important to discuss “OK so now what.” What I mean by that is while we are sitting
here thinking we are the dumbest bag of hammers on the planet for riding “that
sucker all the way down” we have to step back and say “ok we did it and we are
going to have to deal with it – so now what do we do?”
In my
footnote for the earlier Observation I emphasized that you should understand
that market action like this puts you under stress and the longer this goes on
and the lower the market goes the more chronic the stress becomes. I stated
very plainly that you should not let chronic stress and your desire from relief
from that be the cause of the divestiture of your economic assets. In large
part your decision should be based on an objective analysis of the assets you
hold. A good way to make the decision to
hold or sell an asset is to objectively evaluate whether you would buy the asset
if, hypothetically, you had some cash.
Notice I
used the word “objectively” and remember that in my view true objectivity is
impossible in the investment world. The
best course for us then is to become aware of the emotions affecting us and the
biases in investing they cause and then armed with that knowledge try and
overcome them (or at least take them into consideration) when making our
analysis and decisions. In short, we need to recognize and acknowledge our
situation, the emotions we are experiencing and the consequent biases to which
we become subject and deal with them as strongly as we can.
OK so how
about now? Well in the current market
negative emotions are predominant. While
all negative emotions have the same vector (direction as in “lower” or if you
are in California "bummer" dude*) they do not have the
same effect on investment decision making.
A short list of negative emotions includes disgust, sadness, fear and
anger.
The
negative emotion of disgust has been confirmed in behavioral economic studies
to cause people to “expel.” They want to
get rid of assets they own. They do not
want to buy new items – their reflexive brain is screaming - get out of the market.
Sadness on
the other hand does not cause the desire to “expel.” Studies have confirmed
that sadness causes investors to value items that they own less and increase
their perceived value of things that they do not own. Sadness reverses the
“endowment effect (July 2, 2007 Observation “If it’s mine its mighty fine and
if its not it’s not worth a lot”). In other words sadness causes people to
(subjectively) want to turn their portfolio over. Although the endowment effect
is not good for us, its reversal isn’t either.
The
negative emotions of fear and anger have the opposite effect on investors.
Fearful investors have been confirmed in studies to be uncertain and
pessimistic in their outlook. This
causes them to be risk averse. Risk
aversion increases a subjective desire to sell and flee to “safe assets” even
when their account is perfectly balanced and diversified. As we now know even safe assets can take a
drastic decline, so fear is a dangerous emotion because it causes clients to
want to de-diversify (is that a word?).
Angry
investors oddly enough have been confirmed to have a belief that they have
control over their situation. They are
much more certain about the future than uncertain. As a result angry investors
are much more optimistic about the future and are not risk averse but risk
takers. When investors become angry (not
disgusted) they amplify their risk. If you need convincing take a look at how
the markets behaved once the initial shock and fear over September 11, 2009
dissipated and the American public became “angry” – investors caused the
markets to engage in strong rallies. Anger may in fact be a beneficial emotion
in our current market conditions.
The
takeaway here is: identify the negative emotions you or your clients are
experiencing, remember what biases then come into effect and what they temp
someone to do, deal with that temptation and do your best to recommend or make
objective decisions.
That’s
enough for this week. Next week I am
going to talk about the fact that people compulsively believe that the way they
“feel” (their current emotional state) will be the way they “feel” in the
future and how this hurts our ability to plan for our financial futures.
* For those of you not
currently sitting on a surf board this word is correctly pronounced
"dahoude."
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