Category: Your Money

Weekly Recap: The Fallacy of Success

nifty 50 weekly performance heatmap

The Nifty ended the week +1.53% (1.33% in USD terms) largely driven by the metal and energy complex.

Index Performance

index performance chart

Top winners and losers

TATASTEEL +6.82%
BPCL +6.86%
JPASSOCIAT +18.36%
BANKINDIA -6.93%
PFC -5.83%
CANBK -5.42%
It would appear that a “reflation” trade is underway…

ETFs

GOLDBEES +2.89%
BANKBEES +1.69%
NIFTYBEES +1.45%
JUNIORBEES -0.60%
INFRABEES -1.85%
PSUBNKBEES -5.25%
Gold was all over the map this week but PSU Banks got punished…

Advancers and Decliners

advancers and decliners

Yield Curve

The curve seems to be pricing in a rate hike, given high inflation numbers…

yield curve chart

Interbank Rates

… with 3-month bank-to-bank lending still around 10%

mibor interbank rate chart

Sector performance

sector performance chart

Investment theme performance

A roundup of Investment Theme performance this week.

Thought for the weekend

It is perfectly obvious that in any decent occupation (such as bricklaying or writing books) there are only two ways (in any special sense) of succeeding. One is by doing very good work, the other is by cheating. Both are much too simple to require any literary explanation. If you are in for the high jump, either jump higher than any one else, or manage somehow to pretend that you have done so. If you want to succeed at whist, either be a good whist-player, or play with marked cards. You may want a book about jumping; you may want a book about whist; you may want a book about cheating at whist. But you cannot want a book about Success. Especially you cannot want a book about Success such as those which you can now find scattered by the hundred about the book-market. You may want to jump or to play cards; but you do not want to read wandering statements to the effect that jumping is jumping, or that games are won by winners.

Source: The Fallacy of Success

The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: See No Evil, Hear No Evil

Time to prove yourself wrong

How sure are you of your convictions? If I present evidence that refutes your belief, how would you take it? Would you consider my point and argue your case with logic and reason? Or would you stick with your own version because it’s more comforting? Much as we’d like to believe that we fall in the first group, most of us don’t. Again, we’re weighed down by habit. This one is called the “confirmatory bias.”

Cover of "The Little Book of Behavioral I...

In Chapter 8 of The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy, James Montier discusses our tendency to look for evidence that confirms thoughts or insights that agree with us. We practice this to a point where we even bend newfound information to suit our preferences.

Annoying “know-it-alls” (Who isn’t plagued by them?) always have a string of stories and purported facts to push their claims or unasked-for advice. Their art is so convincing that you almost believe they know what they’re about. But contradict them with one fact, try to break their story … and you’ll be facing hours of baseless argument and indignation. Now, the know-it-alls are irksome pests, no doubt, but we’re guilty of the same conduct … at a deeper, self-deceiving level.

When we come to a conclusion on any subject, we unconsciously deviate towards evidence that supports it rather than that which breaks it.

Let’s say you’re looking for houses in a locality you believe is the best fit for your needs. You ask around. Some people say nice things about the area, and you feel happy and contented about your decision. You hear a few moaners too but that’s what they are, right? Moaners. Everyone can’t be happy! But what if you focused on their moaning and researched some more to break your own conviction? I agree, it’s a depressing thought … it’s going to be hard going, unexciting, and it might kill your own plan but consider this: What if you unearth information that saves you from a huge mistake you’d regret all your life?

The internet makes it even harder for us to be open to ideas that are at odds with our personal values. We follow tweets of people whose thoughts align with what we deem right or wrong. The Facebook newsfeed algorithm shows us stories that we “liked” in the past. It’s easy to slip into a self-curated cocoon where we never hear an idea that compels us towards unlikely streams of thought.

Breaking our own analysis – that’s something we never do, at least not willingly and certainly not happily. Many of my friends believe that buying “luxury” flats is a good long-term investment. The idea is so ingrained that it’s like the gospel truth among the IT crowd. Even though research (by a Nobel Prize winning economist no less) proves housing isn’t good investment, I am looked upon as a joker who doesn’t “get it” when I oppose popular view. Almost every flat-owner I know has at least a dozen anecdotes about people who make a “killing” investing in flats. Throw the numbers on a spreadsheet and their enthusiasm quickly fades away. But despite it all, the belief sticks.

That’s our problem. We move away from an opposite point of view. And the more data we access, the more polarized our opinions become. Furthermore, the “biased assimilation” enhances our confidence, all in the wrong direction. It’s a behavioral pitfall that’s annihilated the fortunes of individuals and businesses since ages.

On the other side, there are people like Charles Darwin. He’s the guy who scientifically verified the theory of evolution, explaining our often apelike behavior. His announcement created an uproar in civil society and many opposed his analysis. Did that discourage him? No. Instead, he intensely researched evidence that contradicted his theory, to understand how it fit in.

That’s what an investor needs to do too.

Bruce Berkowitz of Fairholme Capital Management advises investors to look for information that kills a company as opposed to that which supports it. Think of the ways a company can go down – for internal or external reasons, bad strategy, accidents, natural disasters – and verify how well it’s prepared for contingencies. If the company survives the grueling analysis, then maybe it’s worth something.

Many people would call this a “negative” approach. But believe me, it’s that negative attitude that’ll save you in the big bad market. Cultivating this habit will be hard going, especially for the eternal optimists. But did I say becoming a good investor was easy?

 

Monica Samuel is doing a chapter-wise review of the book: The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy by James Montier. You can follow the series by following this tag: tlbbinvesting or by subscribing to this rss feed: tlbbifeed

 

Banks: Straight Line Growth?

We recently added historical quarterly EPS charts on our equities page it has started throwing up some interesting questions. Consider IndusInd Bank [stockquote]INDUSINDBK[/stockquote] for example:

IndusInd Bank EPS chart

The bank has had an almost unbroken streak ever since it started reporting results (from back in 2007 July) and the stock has basically gone from Rs. 50 to Rs. 400 in the same period… a 40% IRR + dividends, if you had just bought the stock and sat on it for 6 years.

A similar story seems to have played out in Yes Bank [stockquote]YESBANK[/stockquote] as well:

Yes Bank EPS chart

And Axis Bank [stockquote]AXISBANK[/stockquote]:

Axis Bank EPS chart

Most private banks more or less have the same story. Incredible how in spite of the economy experiencing multiple head-winds – slowing growth, the Lehman event, etc. banks have been ringing it in…

 

Machine Learning Stocks, Part II

We had previously rolled out the “similar stocks” feature that grouped stocks based on risk and technical parameters. The idea of grouping/clustering stocks is that it allows you to find better alternatives to your favorite stocks. We combined machine learning with our Fundamental Quantitative Scores to cluster stocks based on fundamental metrics.

For example, here’s what Glenmark’s looks like:

Glenmark

 

Related:

Machine Learning Stocks
Quantitative Value Series
StockViz Trading/demat Account
Fundamental Quantitative Scores for Stocks

The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: Turn Off That Bubblevision

Volatility Equals Opportunity

In Chapter 7 of The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy, James Montier builds on the lesson he shares with us in Chapter 6. In the previous chapter, he exposed our compulsive fondness for unwarranted information – a trait that does nothing to improve the accuracy of our decision making capabilities but assuredly boosts our self-confidence. In this chapter, Montier talks of the futility of forecasting or even understanding market ups and downs on the basis of media noise; stuff he calls “placebic” information.

And what is placebic information? It’s data that’s banal, irrelevant, neither here nor there. Yet, it packs enough horsepower to push the majority of people into doing what you want them to do. Salespersons, financial analysts and experts, weathermen and even doctors are adept in the art of delivering placebic information to drive desired actions.

You wake up your sleeping friend to tell him he was sleeping. That’s placebic information that could also get you hurt. Montier gives the classic example of the queue at the Xerox machine. People managed to jump the line 60% of the times by simply asking to use the Xerox machines. The compliance rate jumped to 90% when placebic information was provided, “Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine, because I have to make copies?” Wow! That’s how easy it is!

On a side, I’m sure this experiment was conducted on American subjects because I just can’t see this excuse washing in India. The person who tries that trick will probably get an earful with a few choice words!

Of course, if the backdrop was an office like in Montier’s second example, the behavior pattern would change completely, and conform to the experiment’s results to perfection. When a memo with absolutely pointless information and an instruction was delivered to secretaries in an office, all of them obeyed the command mindlessly. Frankly, I believe about 80% office workers would do the same. As Montier says, when information is delivered in a fashion we’re familiar with, we tend to follow it without conscious thought.

The same thing happens when we listen to the jabber of financial experts on various media channels. Though no one from this group of intellectuals has ever managed to forecast any of the economic downturns witnessed in the last few decades, we still follow their words with rapt attention.

In a 1989 paper co-authored by Larry Summers that explored the 50 largest moves in the U.S. stock market between 1947 and 1987, it was found that:

  • On most sizable return days, the cause cited by press was not important.
  • Previous as well as subsequent press reports could not explain why market changes really happened.

English: J. P. Morgan photo from Images of Ame...

Here’s a fact that every investor must come to accept: Price volatility is an essential ingredient of the market. It cannot be accurately forecasted or captured however much financial wizards keep trying. The winners are those who capture the opportunities created by market fluctuations and have the gumption to stick with their investment plan at a time of uncertainty and free-flowing advice.

When John Pierpont Morgan was asked what the stock market will do, he is quoted to have said “It will fluctuate.” Truer words have never been spoken.

So you get the trick? Cut off that media noise and plug placebic gobbledygook for good.

Monica Samuel is doing a chapter-wise review of the book: The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy by James Montier. You can follow the series by following this tag: tlbbinvesting or by subscribing to this rss feed: tlbbifeed