Good (investor) behaviour

 

An understandable challenge for investors during periods of higher sharemarket volatility is to keep making rational, considered investment decisions and to keep focusing on their long-term goals.

       

As behavioural economists remind us, investors often act irrationally - particularly when markets are rising or falling sharply. And their common behavioural biases can become significant barriers to investment success.

Several of the undesirable biases identified by behavioural economists over the past 25 years or so are worth thinking about during the prevailing sharemarket volatility. These include what is known as "narrow framing".

Narrow framing is the tendency for investors to concentrate much of their attention on a single aspect of their overall investment portfolios. In turn, this may result in overreacting to short-term falls in share prices in the context of current market volatility.

The Journal of Portfolio Management in the US recently published a timely article, Bad habits and good practices, emphasising that investors falling into trap of narrow framing tend not to fully appreciate the benefits of portfolio diversification.

"It is easier to delve into one attention-grabbing investment than into its interactions with the rest of the portfolio," write the article's authors, Amit Goyal, a professor at the University of Lausanne, and Anitti Ilmanen, a London investment funds manager.

"Fortunately," Goyal and Ilmanen add, "each bad habit has a flip side: a good investment practice". They explain that good practice involves investing in a "consistent, disciplined and patient manner" following a strategic, long-term strategy.

Five years ago, Vanguard published a research paper - headed Understanding how the mind can help or hinder investment success - to provide a succinct explanation of behavioural finance including the investor bias of narrow framing.

Investors taking a narrow frame, the Vanguard paper explains, have a tendency to "fret over the performance" of a single investment or investment sector, increasing their sensitivity to loss.

Investors taking what could be described as a wider frame would tend to see a fall in the price of individual investments or an asset sector as just part of the expected movements within an appropriately-diversified portfolio. Indeed, diversified portfolios are specifically designed with the intention of having some assets rising in value to counter other assets falling in value.

In summary, investors determined to try to avoid the traps identified by behavioural economists typically:

  • Set clear and appropriate investment goals.
  • Develop a suitable long-term asset allocation for their portfolios, taking into account their goals, tolerance to risk and the need to diversify their risks and rewards.
  • Remain committed to their appropriate long-term investment strategy through periods of market uncertainty and increased volatility.

Behavioural economists say investors should recognise that they are vulnerable to making irrational decisions and take such steps to keep undesirable behavioural biases in check.

 

By Robin Bowerman
Smart Investing 
Principal & Head of Retail, Vanguard Investments Australia
13 August 2015

 

Any advice contained in this website is of a general nature only and does not take into account your circumstances or needs. You must decide if this information is suitable to your personal situation or seek advice.

Rolanda Adams Financial Services have been my financial advisers for over 20 years. I have always found them to be highly intelligent, knowledgeable and professional in what they do. Rolanda Adams Financial Services is accessible at all times and patiently explain terms that I do not fully understand. I can highly recommend Rolanda Adams Financial Services and it is a pleasure to do so. I do this with the utmost confidence. Marcia Montgomery (Retiree – home duties and ex-clerk with Water Board)
I retired Oct 2012, and seeking Financial Advice for my retirement funds, I decided to have Rolanda Adams Financial Services look after my financial affairs, and so happy I did. Since my retirement I am extremely comfortable with Rolanda Adams Financial Services’s advice, experience and strategies and the returns on my investments. Rolanda Adams Financial Services is my "Breath of Fresh Air" at this stage of my life and she makes herself available 24/7 should you need to talk with her. Steve Hoad (Ground Engineer, Qantas)
In 1997 I left Energy Australia and decided to join Rolanda Adams Financial Services for the financial support and advice that I would need into the future. That decision has proved a very good one and I am still with Rolanda Adams Financial Services who have given me advice and friendship over those many years. The advice given has ensured that my investments have been protected and the major loses, of some, during the GFC was not felt by me unduly. Rolanda Adams Financial Services and the team are very easy to contact at any time and one is always received in a most professional manner. I would be most happy to recommend Rolanda Adams Financial Services to all who need financial services. Graham Fleeton (Manager, Property Insurance Group Energy Australia)
Rolanda Adams Financial Services has been my Adviser for the past 18 years. Through their wide industry experience and professional expertise they have ensured the sound development and ongoing management of my investments. Their advice has invariably been sound, timely and entirely tuned to meet my personal needs in retirement. they have a friendly, engaging manner and are always readily available to address any of my concerns. I have no hesitation in recommending Rolanda Adams Financial Services. Neil O'Keeffe (Chief Inspector (retired), Australian Customs Service)

© 2024 Rolanda Adams Financial Services Pty Ltd. All rights reserved. Site by PlannerWeb.