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4 Important Lessons From Psychology For Investors

Summary Beware of overconfidence – your predictions may be incorrect, prepare yourself. Don’t neglect competition – don’t fall prey to what-you-see-is-all-there-is. Avoid loss aversion/sunk costs – only hold stocks because you believe will outperform. Anchoring and adjustment – Ignore useless information as much as you can when valuing a stock. Humans are not fully rational beings. Most of the time, this irrationality serves a useful evolutionary purpose, but for investing, it can be devastating. The pitfalls laid out below are well-known concepts in behavioral economics. To get a better grasp of how they affect your investment decisions, they are illustrated with my personal experience. Beware of overconfidence Duke University conducts annual surveys among CFOs. Among other things, the CFOs are asked for an estimate range of the S&P 500 returns over the following year. They were asked to provide a value of which they were 90% sure it was too high and another that they would be 90% sure of that would be too low. This would provide a range of 80% accuracy. The findings are shocking: only one in three was correct, versus the 80% one would expect with such a prediction. Their range was too narrow and they were too overconfident. With many decisions that rely on estimates, this overconfidence can be dangerous. Being aware of overconfidence can help a lot. To the credit of the CFOs, they are not in a position where they can give a realistic 80% accurate forecast (which would be between -10% and +30%) because they are seen as experts and look clueless when they provide a very wide range. The best professional forecasters are aware of the low value of their predictions and share less of the overconfidence bias. One of the best sell-side analysts of the Netherlands told me once about analyst estimates: ‘we know one thing for sure: actual earnings won’t match the estimates.’ Don’t neglect competition Colin Camerer and Dan Lovallo observed that often in decision making people ignore competing possibilities and coined the term ‘competition neglect’. It can be illustrated with an example of eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY ). Many sellers let their auction end during peak-visit hours in the evenings to increase the price of the item they try to sell. They neglect the fact that normally auctions should have the same distribution as bids, and therefore bids per auction should not differ. Even worse, they ignore the fact that many people (competitors) use the same strategy. The consequence of neglecting this competition is a lower price obtained for the item as well as a lower probability of a sale ( this is a link to that study ). Investors can learn from this. Every time you study a business, be aware of the most obvious things the market will see. If people like IBM (NYSE: IBM ) because Warren Buffett invests in it, you should be aware that this is already reflected in the stock price. On a deeper level, it pays to see what the competitors of the business you study are doing. It is easy to get optimistic about a company when you only see the competitive landscape from its own perspective. One of such examples is R&D spending at GM’s (NYSE: GM ) competitors. GM has been lagging in R&D expenditure growth as I point out in this article . Not taking into account the increased competitive pressure from other automakers, will create a lot of room for disappointment. Avoid loss aversion/sunk costs The loss-aversion theory explains that people generally are more sensitive to losses than they are to gains. For investors, the relevant part of this theory is often closely related to the sunk-cost theory. After making a bad investment that turns out worse than expected Philip Fisher has described this in his book Stocks and Uncommon Profits as: “More money has probably been lost by investors holding a stock they really did not want until they could ‘at least come out even’ than from any other single reason.” In my case this stems from anticipated regret. I know that if I sell a stock that is down over 30% and it rebounds thereafter that I will experience a great deal of regret. It is very hard to ignore this anticipated emotion. One way to deal with it is to just sell the stock and never look at it again, or sell half of the position to mitigate future underperformance. What I did in one case was going short on other stocks in the same industry that were overvalued compared to the stock I owned. Beware of anchoring and adjustment In making decisions in uncertain environments decision makers frequently make an initial estimate and then adjust this estimate when new information arrives. Anchoring can be the result of anything. Even when answering a simple question like ‘how many people live in Luxembourg?’, hearing a completely unrelated statement like ‘there are a billion butterflies in New York’ can influence you answer. For investors the question is ‘how much is stock X worth’ and the information we should avoid is the stock price in the market. I too often fall prey to this type of thinking. In this article on ING (NYSE: ING ), I remained conservative on my assumptions on growth, ROE, and discount rate in order to keep the target price closer to the market price. I now believe the same stock is worth over €15.50, versus €12.40 then (the +25% is roughly in line with the stock price appreciation since then), while operationally, the company is almost the same as it was 10 months ago. Hedge, always hedge This one is not directly related to any psychological concept, but it does have ties with overconfidence and ignoring what is out there. Never gamble when you don’t have to. Both of my two worst investments of the past two years could have been hedged. The first one is Ensco (NYSE: ESV ). I knew oil price was a risk but confident in fact that I had no idea where the oil price would go, I thought it would be a prudent thing to assume the futures market showed was the most accurate forecast. Perhaps it was, and of course it is not unreasonable to assume an efficient market when it comes to commodities. What I should’ve done, however, is recognize that the oil price was such an important part of the investment case that I was unfit to make that call without a view. Alternatively I could have chosen to hedge the risk, but instead I took a hit of over 50% on the investment. Luckily, I later started to hedge this risk and prevented much worse by doing so. In another case, I discovered that the ArcelorMittal (NYSE: MT ) mandatory convertible notes ( prospectus ) could be proxied by a bond and a long put and short call option on MT stock. My conclusion was that the note was undervalued compared to prevailing interest rates and options that would mitigate any exposure to Arcelor’s stock price. In fact, I saw an arbitrage opportunity. Instead of buying the notes and purchasing a put option while selling a call, I only bought the notes because I found the spreads on the options painfully high, and was tempted by the upside. Again, this investment turned sour and I suffer a loss of over 40%. If the spreads on the options really were too big, I should’ve refrained from buying the notes. How to cope with these behavioral issues? As the behavior is natural, it is hard to overcome. It is perhaps even impossible to overcome all of them. But knowing and acknowledging it affects you is half the battle and helps to put yourself back on the track of rationality when you need it most. Disclosure: I am/we are long MT, IBM, ESV, ING. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

How To Increase The Dynamic Energy Of Your Portfolio

In physics, the dynamic energy of an object is a measure of how much energy the object can release under favorable conditions. In a similar way, a stock portfolio has higher dynamic energy when it consists of stocks with great upside potential thanks to a headwind and its resultant sell-off. The article suggests replacing some stalwarts, whose growth has stumbled but still trade at elevated P/E, with some oil stocks that have been extremely punished due to the oil plunge. In physics, the dynamic energy of an object is a measure of how much energy the object can release under favorable conditions. To clarify this through an example, two objects that are still, with the one at the sea level and the other one on the top of a hill, both have zero kinetic energy. However, the one on the top of the hill possesses much greater dynamic energy because a minimal push can make it start moving at an increasing speed, whereas the other one will remain still under any conditions. Given this definition, investors should try to build a portfolio that has high dynamic energy, i.e., its stocks will greatly appreciate under favorable conditions. Of course this does not involve purchasing extremely high-risk stocks that will return great profits under extremely specific conditions, which have minimal chance of prevailing. Instead this strategy involves purchasing stocks that have asymmetrical reward to risk, as they have been beaten to the extreme due to a temporary headwind despite their strong fundamentals. In the past, it was much easier to build a portfolio with high growth potential. More specifically, all an investor needed to do was to purchase some stalwarts, such as Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO ), PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP ), McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD ), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ), General Mills (NYSE: GIS ), Philip Morris (NYSE: PM ) and Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG ), and hold them forever without even checking on them. As these companies have historically grown their earnings per share [EPS] at a rate higher than 10%, they have historically offered excellent returns to their shareholders. However, as these stalwarts have now expanded to almost every country, further growth has become much harder to accomplish and hence their EPS growth has stumbled in the last 2 years, as shown in the table (data from morningstar.com for 2013-2014 and finance.yahoo.com for 2015): KO PEP MCD WMT GIS PM PG 2013 growth -4% 10% 4% -3% 19% 2% 6% 2014 growth -2% 5% -8% -2% 1% -5% 4% 2015 growth [Exp.] 0% 4% 5% 5% 0% -10% -2% P/E TTM 21 21 19 17 22 16 21 Given the low growth rate of the above stalwarts, their high market cap and their relatively high P/E, investors should realize that a portfolio consisting largely of such stocks possesses limited upside (fortunately it also has limited downside, as these stocks greatly outperform the market during a downturn). Therefore, investors should add some stocks that have been unfairly beaten to the extreme due to a temporary headwind. At the moment, there are some off-shore drillers and oilfield service companies that possess strong balance sheets and great managements but have been sold off to the extreme due to the sell-off of their entire sector. Investors should realize that oil is very cyclical in nature and hence it will not remain for many years at its current level, which is half of the level that prevailed in the last 4 years. To be sure, the number of oil rigs has consistently decreased in the last 10 weeks, reaching the level of March-2010, and will keep declining if oil remains pressured. Moreover, all oil companies have significantly curtailed their capital expenses for future growth, which will ultimately result in lower production levels in the future. Thus it is a question of time before oil returns to a more reasonable range, which will render more rigs profitable than the current price does. The table below includes some stocks with strong earnings and low amounts of debt, which will strongly recover when oil returns to a more reasonable level, around $70-$80. The table depicts the decline of these stocks off their peak in the summer, the upside from their current price to their peak and the upside from their current price to half way till their peak, which will correspond to an oil price within $70-$80. NOV HAL ESV NOV Decline off peak 41% 42% 46% 40% Upside to peak 69% 72% 85% 67% Upside if oil rises to $70-$80 35% 36% 43% 33% P/E TTM 9 11 5 6 Given the extremely low P/E of Ensco (NYSE: ESV ), its low debt and its high dividend yield (10%), it is the stock with the greatest upside potential if oil rises to $70-$80. Noble Energy (NYSE: NE ) has a very low current P/E but its forward P/E is higher, around 9, while the company also carries a much higher relative amount of net debt ($7 B) than Ensco, standing at about 9 years’ earnings. National Oilwell Varco (NYSE: NOV ) has a low P/E and high backlog, which can fully protect its profitability for at least one more year, while its balance sheet is essentially debt-free, as its net debt ($2 B) is worth only one year’s earnings. Halliburton (NYSE: HAL ) has a low P/E but its earnings are expected to plunge almost 50% this year so it is a riskier choice. To sum up, investors should always look for stocks that have strong fundamentals but have been punished due to a temporary headwind, thus possessing great upside potential. As the market always overreacts to headwinds and any factor of uncertainty, it is only natural that asymmetric reward to risk shows up whenever an unforeseen headwind emerges. Of course this does not mean that an entire portfolio should consist of such stocks, particularly in the case of defensive investors. Nevertheless, when a stock of a portfolio reaches an overvalued level that leaves very limited further upside, it is prudent for investors to exchange that stock with another one as shown above so that their portfolio maintains high dynamic energy. Disclosure: The author is long ESV, NOV. (More…) The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.