From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Risk aversion is the reluctance of a person to accept a bargain with an
uncertain payoff rather than another bargain with a
more certain, but
possibly lower, expected payoff.
For example, a risk-averse investor might choose to put his or her money into a bank account with a low but guaranteed interest rate, rather than into a stock that may have high expected returns, but also involves a chance of losing value.
Summary:
Due to risk aversion:
1. The "investor"
did not invest into stocks for
fear of short term losses, despite knowing that stocks provide better returns than cash or bonds in the long run..
2. The "investor"
sold his winners too early to
avoid losses..
3. The "investor"
hung onto his losing stocks, in the hope that the prices will recover and thereby
avoiding realising his losses.
In all the above ways, the motivation is fear, which results in poor decision making..
Early research by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky found people place greater value on avoiding losses than on making gains.
Not only that, but they prefer a small certain gain to a larger potential one.
Nicholson says investing should be managed like a business.
Some decisions work out and some don't: if an investment doesn't work, sell; if it works, let it continue.
Unfortunately, most people do the reverse.
''The most valuable thing I have learnt over more than 30 years of investing in stocks is that great investors think differently. They understand that investing is about managing uncertainty,''
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Decision making in a sideways market
Date July 31, 2013
Shakespeare wrote that life was a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. He could have been writing about the sharemarket - up one day, down the next, going nowhere. And that leaves investors in a quandary.
Most investors understand that shares provide better returns in the long run than cash or bonds, but the fear of short-term losses stops them acting on it. When markets are choppy with no clear direction, investors tend either to hesitate on the sidelines and miss opportunities, or sell too early to avoid a loss.
Either way, the motivation is fear, which results in poor decision making. ''The most valuable thing I have learnt over more than 30 years of investing in stocks is that great investors think differently. They understand that investing is about managing uncertainty,'' professional investor Colin Nicholson says. In his latest book, he discusses the common decision-making traps investors fall into and how to avoid them, drawing on the field of behavioural finance. Early research by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky found people place greater value on avoiding losses than on making gains. Not only that, but they prefer a small certain gain to a larger potential one.
Further behavioural finance studies have found that an aversion to losses caused people to sell their winning stocks too early and hold their losers too long in the hope the share price would recover. Nicholson says investing should be managed like a business. Some decisions work out and some don't: if an investment doesn't work, sell; if it works, let it continue. Unfortunately, most people do the reverse.
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''We are in a sideways market at the moment, which is the most difficult of all to invest in,'' Nicholson says. ''Any fool can make money in a rising market. And if investors are half-smart they can avoid falling markets. But in a sideways market you need to be a stock picker and you need to preserve capital.''
A practical way to achieve this is to use stop losses. Nicholson says the key attributes of great investors are patience, discipline and perspective. ''People get caught up in the psychology of the crowd,'' he says. ''If you can step back and get some perspective it helps.''
Reading about market history is helpful, but before you invest you need a plan.
''One of the ways to deal with inertia and fear is to have a written investment plan that sets out how you select stocks and manage your investments, so no matter what the market throws at you, you know what to do,'' Nicholson says.
Think Like the Great Investors: Make Better Decisions and Raise Your Investing to a New Level, by Colin Nicholson, 2013, Wiley.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/money/decision-making-in-a-sideways-market-20130730-2qvhe.html#ixzz2ahFdpHNZ
lwalk
thank you, keep them coming.
2013-08-01 21:51