Behavioral Finance and Your Portfolio
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Behavioral Finance and Your Portfolio

A Navigation Guide for Building Wealth

Michael M. Pompian

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eBook - ePub

Behavioral Finance and Your Portfolio

A Navigation Guide for Building Wealth

Michael M. Pompian

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Become a more strategic and successful investor by identifying the biases impacting your decision making.

In Behavioral Finance and Your Portfolio, acclaimed investment advisor and author Michael M. Pompian delivers an insightful and thorough guide to countering the negative effect of cognitive and behavioral biases on your financial decisions. You'll learn about the "Big Five" behavioral biases and how they're reducing your returns and leading to unwanted and unnecessary costs in your portfolio.

Designed for investors who are serious about maximizing their gains, in this book you'll discover how to:

? Take control of your decision-making—even when challenging markets push greed and fear to intolerable levels

? Reflect on how to make investment decisions using data-backed and substantiated information instead of emotion and bias

? Counter deep-seated biases like loss aversion, hindsight and overconfidence with self-awareness and hard facts

? Identify your personal investment psychology profile, which you can use to inform your future financial decision making

Behavioral Finance and Your Portfolio was created for individual investors, but will also earn a place in the libraries of financial advisors, planners and portfolio managers who are determined to counteract the less principled and data-driven aspects of their decision making.

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Informazioni

Editore
Wiley
Anno
2021
ISBN
9781119801993
Edizione
1
Argomento
Business

PART I
INTRODUCTION TO BEHAVIORAL FINANCE

In Chapters 1 and 2, Part One of the book, readers will get an introduction to behavioral finance. This will set up Chapters 3 through 22, which review 20 behavioral biases, both cognitive and emotional. Two types of cognitive bias are reviewed in Chapters 3 through 15: Belief Perseverance cognitive biases are covered in Chapters 3 through 8, and Information Processing cognitive biases are covered in Chapters 9 through 15. Emotional biases are then covered in Chapters 16 through 22. After these chapters, the book introduces four Behavioral Investor Types (BITs) and then the BITs are applied in four case studies.

1
What Is Behavioral Finance and Why Does It Matter?

People in standard finance are rational. People in behavioral finance are normal.
Meir Statman, PhD, Santa Clara University
If you are reading this book, you have decided that building the best portfolio for you, your family or your organization requires a solid understanding of human behavior. And the most important human behavior to understand is your own! After all, you need to make the best financial decisions possible and this requires understanding how you behave when money is involved. After advising individuals and families for over 25 years on their investment portfolios, and now running my own investment firm, I have found that understanding and applying behavioral finance to the investment process is the absolutely best way to manage portfolios for long term financial success. It may be counter-intuitive, but unless one has super-human capabilities to know which direction the markets are going all the time, the best strategy for managing a portfolio is to choose a comfortable level of risk and stick with that strategy. The less tinkering the better! Does this mean you don't pay attention to it? Of course not! Investors need to pay attention to the value of assets they own, the structural changes in companies or industries that occur, portfolio rebalancing points, etc.—but the core asset allocation framework should remain the same unless personal circumstances have changed. So why is it so hard for investors to stay invested during periods of market volatility? Put simply, many people don't understand how emotions and irrational behaviors creep into the investment process. This book is all about understanding and diagnosing your own behavior so that you can create the best portfolios and have long-term investment success!
At its core, behavioral finance attempts to understand and explain actual investor and market behaviors versus theories of investor behavior. This idea differs from traditional (or standard) finance, which is based on assumptions of how investors and markets should behave. Investors from around the world who want to create better portfolios have begun to realize that they cannot rely solely on theories or mathematical models to explain individual investor and market behavior. As Professor Statman's quote puts it, standard finance people are modeled as “rational,” whereas behavioral finance people are modeled as “normal.” This can be interpreted to mean that “normal” people may behave irrationally—but the reality is that almost no one behaves perfectly rationally when it comes to finances and dealing with normal people is what this book is all about. We will delve into the topic of the irrational market behavior; however, the focus of the book is on individual investor behavior and how to create portfolios that investors can stick with for the long haul.
Fundamentally, behavioral finance is about understanding how people make decisions, both individually and collectively. By understanding how investors and markets behave, it may be possible to modify or adapt to these behaviors in order to improve economic outcomes. In many instances, knowledge of and integration of behavioral finance may lead to superior results for investors.
We will begin this chapter with a review of the prominent researchers in the field of behavioral finance. We will then review the debate between standard finance and behavioral finance. By doing so, we can establish a common understanding of what we mean when we say behavioral finance, which will in turn permit us to understand the use of this term as it applies directly to the practice of creating YOUR best portfolio.

Why Behavioral Finance Matters

Market research shows that when investors try to protect their portfolios by moving in and out of the market, they limit gains and increase losses. Taking a long-term view is challenging but it is the most rewarding strategy. This is because staying invested helps fuel long-term portfolio appreciation. The primary evidence linking investor behavior to sub-par investment returns is a study done by a firm called DALBAR in Boston every year. This study compares the returns actually earned by the investor to indexed returns and inflation. Investor returns are calculated by DALBAR using the change in total mutual fund assets after excluding sales, redemptions and exchanges. This method of calculation captures realized and unrealized capital gains, dividends, interest, trading costs, sales charges, fees, expenses and any other costs. The most recently available study as of this writing is 2019.1 That report found that the average investor took some money off the table in early 2018 as the market went up, but was poorly positioned for the second half of the year. The average investor was a net withdrawer of funds in 2018. Poor timing caused a loss of 9.42% on the year compared to an S&P 500 index that lost only 4.38%. Figure 1.1 illustrates the DALBAR data as of the 2019 report. Note the 30-year difference of 6% per annum!
Bar chart depicts Investor Returns from the 2019 DALBAR Report.
Figure 1.1 Investor Returns from the 2019 DALBAR Report
Source: DALBAR Report, 2019. ©2019, DALBAR, Inc.
Schematic illustration of the Behavioral Finance Gap.
Figure 1.2 The Behavioral Finance Gap
The difference between the returns earned by investors holding a given index versus the returns earned by investors who move their money around in an emotional response to market movements is called the “Behavioral Finance Gap.” Figure 1.2 demonstrates this concept. The purpose of this book is to help you minimize this gap so that you can reach your financial goals. MIND THE GAP!

Behavioral Finance: The Big Picture

Behavioral finance has become a very hot topic, generating credence with the rupture of the tech-stock bubble in March of 2000. It was pushed to the forefront of both investors' and advisors' minds with the financial market meltdown of 2008–2009. A variety of confusing terms may arise from a proliferation of topics resembling behavioral finance, at least in name, including: behavioral science, investor psychology, cognitive psychology, behavioral economics, experimental economics, and cognitive science, to name a few. Furthermore, many investor psychology books refer to various aspects of behavioral finance but fail to fully define it. In this section, we will discuss some of the acclaimed authors in the field and review their outstanding work (not an exhaustive list), which will provide a broad overview of the subject. We will then examine the two primary subtopics in behavioral finance: behavioral finance micro and behavioral finance macro. Finally, we will observe the ways in which behavioral finance applies specifically to wealth management.

Key Figures in the Field

In Chapter 2 we will review a history of behavioral finance. In this section, we will review some key figures in the field who have more recently contributed exceptionally brilliant work to the field of behavioral finance. Most of the people we will review here are active academics, but many of them have also been applying their work to the “real world,” which makes them especially worthy of our attention. While this is clearly not an exhaustive list, the names of the people we will review are: Professor Robert Shiller, Professor Richard Thaler, Professor Meir Statman, Professor Daniel Kahnemann, and Professor Daniel Ariely.
The first prominent figure we will discuss is Yale University Professor Robert Shiller (Figure 1.3). He famously predicted two of the biggest bubbles of all time: the dot-com bubble and the housing bubble. Both times he published an edition of his book Irrational Exuberance, which described and predicted ea...

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