Sunday , 24 November 2024

Which 2 Investment Behaviors Are Most Associated With Negative Returns & to What Degree?

Which type of behavior is most associated with negative returns and to what degree? This article isolates 2 specific bad behaviors that hurt investor returns most and recommends how such shortcomings can easily be avoided.

So writes Rick Ferri in edited excerpts from an article* posted on advisoranalyst.com entitled Two Behaviors That Hurt Stock Investors.

[The following is presented by Lorimer Wilson, editor of www.munKNEE.com and  may have been edited ([ ]), abridged (…) and/or reformatted (some sub-titles and bold/italics emphases) for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. This paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.]

Ferri goes on to say in further edited excerpts:

…A recent study (Which Investment Behaviors Really Matter for Individual Investors) conducted by four academics from Goethe University Frankfurt (Joachim Weber, Steffen Meyer, Benjamin Loos, and Andreas Hackethal)… focused on determining which types of behavior are most associated with negative returns and to what degree and isolated two specific bad behaviors that hurt investor returns most.

The research covered 13 years of data for 5,000 individuals who invested through a European discount brokerage firm. Their stock selection performance was compared against 10 measures of investment behavior. They included the following (pardon the trade lingo):

  1. Portfolio turnover: unprogrammed trading volume scaled by portfolio value.
  2. Trade clustering: clustering of investor trades in time.
  3. Disposition effect: selling of winners and holding of losers.
  4. Leading turnover: trading before other investors (same security/same direction).
  5. Forecasting skill: systematically realizing excess returns on purchased securities.
  6. Trend following: buying funds with recent increases in value.
  7. Home bias: preference for German stocks or Germany-focused funds.
  8. Local bias: preference for stocks/funds with nearby headquarters.
  9. Lottery mentality: preference for stocks with low price and high idiosyncratic volatility/skewness.
  10. Under-diversification: holding only a few securities and/or highly correlated securities.

The results:

Only

  • lottery mentality (#9) and
  • under-diversification (#10) significantly…

affected the average stock investor’s returns (relative to other investors in the same study) – by -3% and -4% respectively.

In my opinion, the real message in the research is to:

  1. forgo buying individual stocks as a way to invest (it’s difficult enough to try to pick the right companies, let alone all of the emotional baggage that comes along with managing a stock portfolio) and
  2. buy broad-based low-cost equity index funds instead (a total stock market index fund eliminates a lottery mentality and under-diversification issues because it owns thousands of securities [and has a lower management expense ratio (MER) associated with it].

Conclusion

Selecting individual stocks is difficult enough without the emotional biases and other behavioral problems that follow. Avoid the pitfalls of chasing returns and under-diversification by purchasing a low-cost index fund or ETF. It’s the smart way to invest.

*http://www.advisoranalyst.com/glablog/2014/02/14/two-behaviors-that-hurt-stock-investors.html (Copyright 2007 – 2013 AdvisorAnalyst.com / All rights reserved)

Disagree? Concur? Have your say on the subject via:

We’d like to know what you have to say.

Related Articles:

1. 10 Index ETFs for Building an Ideal Retirement Oriented Portfolio

Constructing a portfolio for the retirement years requires one to focus on portfolio risk or uncertainty while not neglecting return. If the portfolio asset allocation plan is too conservative, the return will not meet lifestyle expectations. Inflation is again on the rise and this needs to be taken into consideration when putting together a retirement oriented portfolio. Below is a combination of index ETFs that project respectable returns while holding down portfolio volatility. Words: 455 Read More »

2. Index Funds are a MUST in Every Long-Term Investment Portfolio – Here’s why

The average annual equity return for individual investors has been 60-65% less ( 6-7 percentage points less), over a twenty year period, than the performance of the indices that everyone assumes reflect investor returns! In spite of such a dramatic  under-performance that fact is being ignored because it is not useful to academics or investment companies – but I would think it is of interest to YOU! Words: 729 Read More »

3. 65% Proof! Why Index Funds Increase Your Investment Returns Dramatically

The average annual equity return for individual investors has been 60-65% less ( 6-7 percentage points less), over a 20 yearperiod, than the performance of the indices that everyone assumes reflect investor returns! In spite of such a dramatic  under-performance that fact is being ignored because it is not useful to academics or investment companies – but I would think it is of interest to YOU! Words: 729

4. Portfolio “Diversification” Can Kill Your Portfolio Returns – Here’s Why

Most investors don’t know anything more about diversification than you “shouldn’t put all your eggs in one basket” [but] spending some time trying to understand the ways you might be shooting yourself in the foot could seriously enhance your portfolio returns and stop catastrophic risk. [There are some advantages to diversification if you REALLY know what you are doing but the shortcomings can go a long way towards killing your portfolio returns. In this article we identify what they are and how best to avoid them.] Words: 1055 Read More »

5.  Warren Buffett: Diversification is Nothing More Than Protection Against Ignorance

NOT putting all your eggs in one basket makes intuitive sense to many investors. Indeed, evidence indicates that putting more eggs in your basket may actually crack your portfolio, not protect it. Words: 515

6. Warren Buffett’s Advice Is NOT for the Average Investor! Here’s Why

Warren Buffett is a smart guy and has ascended to near immortal [status] amongst the investment community due to his superior stock picking skills and boundless wealth. [That being said,] listening to his views on portfolio management and diversification could cripple your financial health and may make him one of the most dangerous men in finance. [Let me explain.] Words: 720