The most common investor biases ... and their solutions (part 1)
Psychology leads more investors astray than any other variable. Here we explain the most common pitfalls and their solutions.
What causes most investors to fail is psychology, so you need to be prepared. Here are nine of the most common hiccups your brain is likely to encounter.
Confirmation bias: Once we form an opinion we tend to search for and interpret information in a way that is consistent with it. When investing, confirmation bias can lead to overconfidence.
Solution: Imagine that your investment has collapsed and ask yourself how and why it might have failed.
Bandwagon effect: The tendency to believe or do something simply because a large group of others believe or are doing the same. This leads to herd behavior in the stock market.
Solution: When you notice your beliefs conform to a large group, play devil's advocate for a moment and consider what the best counter arguments might be.
Availability heuristic: The tendency to overestimate the likelihood of events that can be easily recalled.
Solution: When considering an investment, focus on the company's long-term history, not just recent media coverage.
Hyperbolic discounting: The tendency to favour an immediate payoff rather than a distant, more advantageous benefit. This is one of the most limiting biases when it comes to investing and saving.
Solution: Constantly ask yourself ‘In ten years' time, what decision will I wish I had made today?'
Normalcy bias: The tendency for people to underestimate the probability of a disaster that hasn't happened before and, consequently, to fail to prepare for it.
Solution: When investing, try to think through a worst-case scenario, how it might be caused and how you should prepare. Be wary of thinking ‘if it hasn't happened before, it can't happen'.
Self-serving bias: The tendency for people to feel responsible for successes but blame failures on external factors.
Solution: Failures are inevitable in investing. Take pride in them and use them to learn and adapt. When you blame failure on circumstance, you forgo the opportunity to improve.
Loss aversion: Our tendency to strongly prefer avoiding a loss to making a gain of equal size. It can cause us to sell irrationally to avoid further losses, even if an asset is a wise long-term investment.
Solution: Loss aversion is deeply wired into all of us. The best way to combat this bias is to distance yourself psychologically from the potential loss. Imagine that it was not you but a friend in the situation, what advice would you give them?
Endowment effect: Where we ascribe more value to things merely because we own them. We demand higher compensation to give up an object than we would pay to acquire it.
Solution: It's easy to get attached to the stocks we own, especially those that have done well. Set the valuation criteria you require to sell a stock before you buy it, and only move the goal posts for fundamental changes in your investment case, not merely changes in share price.
Ostrich effect: Avoiding confrontation with a negative situation by pretending it doesn't exist. Studies have shown that investors check the value of their investments less during bear markets.
Solution: Commit to checking your investments periodically and, for those showing substantial losses, determine whether the long-term investment case has changed fundamentally or if the current loss is likely to be temporary.
To learn more about investor biases and heuristics, see Part 2.
Frequently Asked Questions about this Article…
Confirmation bias in investing is when we only seek out information that supports our existing beliefs, leading to overconfidence. To overcome this, imagine your investment has failed and explore the reasons why it might have happened.
The bandwagon effect can lead to herd behavior, where you make investment decisions based on what a large group is doing. To counter this, play devil's advocate and consider the best counterarguments to the popular opinion.
The availability heuristic is the tendency to overestimate the likelihood of events that are easily recalled, such as recent news. Focus on a company's long-term history rather than just recent media coverage to avoid this bias.
Hyperbolic discounting is when we prefer immediate rewards over more significant future benefits, which can limit our investing and saving potential. Ask yourself, 'In ten years, what decision will I wish I had made today?' to combat this bias.
Normalcy bias is underestimating the probability of disasters that haven't occurred before. Prepare by thinking through worst-case scenarios and how they might happen, rather than assuming 'if it hasn't happened before, it can't happen.'
Self-serving bias is when we credit ourselves for successes but blame failures on external factors. Embrace failures as learning opportunities to improve your investment strategy, rather than blaming circumstances.
Loss aversion is the tendency to prefer avoiding losses over making gains, leading to irrational selling. Distance yourself psychologically from potential losses by imagining advising a friend in the same situation.
The endowment effect is valuing owned items more than those we don't own, affecting how we sell stocks. Set clear valuation criteria for selling before buying a stock, and adjust only for fundamental changes, not just price changes.