Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 584

Are more informed investors prone to making poorer decisions?

An investor’s behavior has every bit as much of an effect on their returns as the stock market environment they happen to live through. I know this as well as anybody.

In 2021, I earned a measly 6% in a year where everything - absolutely everything - went up, and putting my money in a global ETF would have scored me 23.5% in sterling. Why did this happen? Because I behaved like an idiot, traded too much, and racked up massive brokerage fees.

Re-opening this wound to write a recent article reminded me of how important it is to be aware of how we behave as investors and why. In that sense, a podcast appearance by previous Firstlinks contributor Professor Michael Finke popped up at exactly the right time.

Here are four things I learned from his discussion with Standard Deviations podcast host Daniel Crosby about the impact of behavior on investment and retirement outcomes.

The three main sources of panicked trading

Overtrading like I did in 2021 is a classic case of poor behaviour stunting returns. Another classic is our very human tendency to get carried away in the good times (buying high) and overly scared in the not so good times (selling low).

For those investing over the past 25 years or so, perhaps the worst thing you could have done was to panic and sell everything whenever stock markets wobbled. Even in the years since Covid reared its head, this has happened several times. And pretty much every time, markets have tended to bounce back very strongly.


Source: Morningstar

Finke has done a lot of research into how likely different buckets of investors (measured by the type of retirement account they have) are to panic when markets fall. As I understood it, three things seem to have an outsized impact on an investor’s likelihood to sell everything and move into cash:

  1. The investor’s time horizon – how long until the person is due to retire? Investors with less than ten years to go until retirement were far more likely to sell out of equities and go into cash at times of market tumult.
  2. The investor’s time in the market – has the investor lived through market panics before and realised that it’s usually OK on the other side? If they haven’t, the investor is probably more likely to sell at the first sign of trouble.
  3. How engaged the investor is with their portfolio and markets. The least interested investors (those in a simple lifecycle product) were least likely to panic. The most engaged, self-directed investors were most likely.

The first two make a lot of sense. The third might seem counter-intuitive because it suggests that the more informed you are as an investor, the more prone you are to making poor decisions. But when you think about it, it makes perfect sense.

Ignorance is bliss?

The likelihood of making a poor, emotionally driven decision increases at times of extreme market volatility. This, according to Finke, is where ignorance can be far more of a super power than knowledge or a keen interest in markets.

Why? Because those who take no interest in markets and no role in managing their investments don’t care or know enough about what is going on to panic. To illustrate this, Crosby told a story about Betterment, a so-called robo advisor in the US.

Whenever a stock market correction came along, Betterment used to email every single one of their clients with messages telling them not to worry and to focus on the long-term. They did this in the hope that it would encourage better investor behaviour. A noble act.

Instead, Betterman found that their email blasts actually seemed to encourage worse behaviour. Why? Because previously “ignorant” investors became more worried than they would have otherwise. Betterman switched to only emailing investors that logged into their accounts during periods of volatility.

This rings true even outside of market corrections. If I didn’t enjoy reading stock pitches and macro articles so much, would I have tinkered with my portfolio so much in 2021? I doubt it. I probably would have been far more focused on the savings part of the equation rather than the investing part.

An active interest in investing might be every bit as dangerous to your returns as it is helpful. Just another reason that I recommend you read my colleague Shani’s earlier piece for Firstlinks on her disinterested investing strategy.

The double-edged source of engagement

One measure of engagement is how often somebody tracks their portfolio balance. I’ve always wanted to reduce the frequency with which I do this, but I find it hard not to check up on the shares that I have selected for myself. As for the index funds I own in my super, I find it far easier to ignore.

According to Finke, being more engaged in this manner isn’t all bad, but it is a double-edged sword. His research suggests that people who track their investments more tend to save far more than those who don’t. This is potentially because during good times, of which the stock market has had many in recent years, a rising balance provides positive feedback and motivation to keep investing.

If the stock market was to reverse course, however, constantly logging in and getting negative feedback could induce feelings of panic and make the attentive investor more prone to making an emotional or rash decision.

Behaviorally optimal versus ‘spreadsheet optimal’

Finke and Crosby also discussed the need for a shift in mindset from ‘optimal’ asset allocations to those that make it easier for investors to avoid poor behaviour.

As an example, stock markets have generally been very strong over the past 25 years. Because of this, most back-tested returns will show that holding excess cash in your portfolio was a grave error. But would it have been an error?

If presence of a ‘safe’ cash bucket helps the investor think longer-term with the remaining equities allocation, it might help them capture more of the market’s strong return than they would have otherwise. I have thought about this a lot in regard to investing in actively managed funds.

It is easy to write off active funds because we all know how hard it is for them to outperform market averages over time. But as Morningstar’s Mind The Gap study shows every year, asset class averages do not equal the returns that investors actually achieve.

If you, for example, have deep rooted concerns about the index’s concentration – be it in a small group of individual stocks, a certain sector, or a certain country - you might find it harder to simply ‘set and forget’ that investment. And find yourself more prone to panicked buy and sell decisions.

As a result, I think there is every chance that finding a fund with 1) a manager you trust and 2) a process that fits your own investing philosophy could produce a better overall return for you. Even if that fund does indeed lag the market average.

 

Joseph Taylor is an Associate Investment Specialist at Morningstar. You can listen to Michael Finke’s appearance on the Standard Deviations podcast here.

 

RELATED ARTICLES

If you are new to investing, avoid these 10 common mistakes

Stop paying attention

The 9 most important things I've learned about investing over 40 years

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Vale Graham Hand

It’s with heavy hearts that we announce Firstlinks’ co-founder and former Managing Editor, Graham Hand, has died aged 66. Graham was a legendary figure in the finance industry and here are three tributes to him.

Australian stocks will crush housing over the next decade, one year on

Last year, I wrote an article suggesting returns from ASX stocks would trample those from housing over the next decade. One year later, this is an update on how that forecast is going and what's changed since.

Avoiding wealth transfer pitfalls

Australia is in the early throes of an intergenerational wealth transfer worth an estimated $3.5 trillion. Here's a case study highlighting some of the challenges with transferring wealth between generations.

Taxpayers betrayed by Future Fund debacle

The Future Fund's original purpose was to meet the unfunded liabilities of Commonwealth defined benefit schemes. These liabilities have ballooned to an estimated $290 billion and taxpayers continue to be treated like fools.

Australia’s shameful super gap

ASFA provides a key guide for how much you will need to live on in retirement. Unfortunately it has many deficiencies, and the averages don't tell the full story of the growing gender superannuation gap.

Looking beyond banks for dividend income

The Big Four banks have had an extraordinary run and it’s left income investors with a conundrum: to stick with them even though they now offer relatively low dividend yields and limited growth prospects or to look elsewhere.

Latest Updates

Investment strategies

9 lessons from 2024

Key lessons include expensive stocks can always get more expensive, Bitcoin is our tulip mania, follow the smart money, the young are coming with pitchforks on housing, and the importance of staying invested.

Investment strategies

Time to announce the X-factor for 2024

What is the X-factor - the largely unexpected influence that wasn’t thought about when the year began but came from left field to have powerful effects on investment returns - for 2024? It's time to select the winner.

Shares

Australian shares struggle as 2020s reach halfway point

It’s halfway through the 2020s decade and time to get a scorecheck on the Australian stock market. The picture isn't pretty as Aussie shares are having a below-average decade so far, though history shows that all is not lost.

Shares

Is FOMO overruling investment basics?

Four years ago, we introduced our 'bubbles' chart to show how the market had become concentrated in one type of stock and one view of the future. This looks at what, if anything, has changed, and what it means for investors.

Shares

Is Medibank Private a bargain?

Regulatory tensions have weighed on Medibank's share price though it's unlikely that the government will step in and prop up private hospitals. This creates an opportunity to invest in Australia’s largest health insurer.

Shares

Negative correlations, positive allocations

A nascent theme today is that the inverse correlation between bonds and stocks has returned as inflation and economic growth moderate. This broadens the potential for risk-adjusted returns in multi-asset portfolios.

Retirement

The secret to a good retirement

An Australian anthropologist studying Japanese seniors has come to a counter-intuitive conclusion to what makes for a great retirement: she suggests the seeds may be found in how we approach our working years.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2024 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.