Weekly Recap: The fallacy of inept bad guys

Nifty performance

The Nifty ended the week -2.98% (-2.30% in USD terms.) Banks took much of the heat.

Index Performance

index performance

Top Winners and Losers

ZEEL +6.59%
ASHOKLEY +6.74%
APOLLOHOSP +9.39%
YESBANK -14.45%
DLF -12.97%
BANKINDIA -11.42%
Yesbank continued its roller-coaster ride…

ETFs

INFRABEES +2.50%
JUNIORBEES -0.08%
GOLDBEES -0.44%
NIFTYBEES -2.79%
PSUBNKBEES -5.90%
BANKBEES -6.64%
Is infrastructure finally turning the corner or is this a dead-cat bounce after tumbling last week?

Advancers and Decliners

advance decline ratio

Yield Curve

Long term rates ended higher – it looks like the market is pricing in 50bps rate hike?

yield curve

Interbank Rates

The rates that banks charge each other has come down over the last 30 days. Does it mean that the liquidity crunch is nearing an end?

interbank rates

Sector Performance

sector performance

Thought for the Weekend

It means assuming the opposition is a legitimate threat until they prove otherwise, rather than assuming that they’re incompetent. Most of all, it means abandoning the belief that we deserve to win, and instead believing we have to earn all of our victories the hard way.

Source: The fallacy of inept bad guys

The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: Forecasting is a Sham

Prepare – Don’t Predict!

On encountering a teacher from hell and believe me, they’ve been some, I would console myself with the quote “Those who can’t do, teach.” But 6th century poet and philosopher, Lao Tzu’s quote in Chapter 5 of The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy wins the deal for me: “Those who have knowledge don’t predict. Those who predict don’t have knowledge.”

It appears that Lao Tzu had a premonition of coming times when common man would be inundated with predictions from financial soothsayers and projectionists. He guessed right that we’d need some hard-core wisdom to pull ourselves away from the damaging influence.

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

Author James Montier ties the fatality of financial predictions to the over-confidence of economists and investment experts. If you remember, we discussed this aspect of investors in Chapter 4, along with a depressing succession of human flaws outlined in earlier chapters – procrastination, temporary paralysis, illusional control, and the empathy gap. Mercifully, Montier also provides a practicable solution that can save us.

But coming back to the folly of believing in forecasts: Did you know that the consensus of economists failed to predict any of the last four recessions, including the 2008 crash? In fact, the track record of economist predictions is abysmal in both short and long-term issues. Stocks that analysts profess will go up at an accelerated pace over a 5 year trajectory have tended to move at a snail’s tempo.

But why only forecasting, analysts also try setting the target price of securities even after overwhelming evidence of their colossal failure in this regard. For example, in 2000, target prices were 37% above the market price. Analysts predicted that the stocks would go up 24% in 2008. Instead they fell, that too by 40%. It reminds me of the time we bought our house in 2008. After waiting for years for property rates to stabilize or fall (hey, optimism is a default trait), we finally invested. And the very next month, prices fell.

As Keynes says, “We simply do not know.” And that is literally the only thing we know for sure about the future.

The failure of economists and analysts are well documented. Economic forecasters even missed recessions when they were already underway. And it is not just economists who are consistently wrong. Experts of all “soft” sciences are overconfident about their own predictive prowess. For instance, Nate Silver points out that if political scientists couldn’t predict the downfall of the Soviet Union – perhaps the most important event in the latter half of the twentieth century – then what exactly were they good for?

So now we know that economists are bad forecasters. Worse, unlike weathermen, they don’t even own up to it. So why is it that financial predictions are featured everywhere?

It’s a simple case of demand and supply. People want it, media provides it. Add to that our own indolence in going with “ready-to-eat” rather than cooking from scratch. Investors want actionable information to justify their buy or sell decisions so economists provide it in bulk. It’s easier for us to have them do our homework. The only problem with this approach is that when predictions fall flat, the economist slinks away mouthing a disclaimer while we are stuck with a red face, a loss or worse, a debt.

Don’t put yourself in this situation.

Montier points out another evil of forecasts – a trait called anchoring. Research shows that if given a number, we tend to stick with it. In an experiment, when people wrote a number, it stuck in their mind such that when asked to write another random number later, they didn’t go too far from the first. This happened even when participants were aware that the first and second numbers were isolated entities with no relation to each other.

This means that even if we read a forecast and don’t believe it, our mind subconsciously deviates to it in our mental processes. Solution? Stay clear of forecasts altogether.

But what then should we base our investment decisions on? Montier says – nothing but penetrating research and analysis. Instead of imagining future value, evaluate the current value of a business, its nature and intrinsic worth. He suggests a backtracking methodology: Take the current price and go back to assess growth. Compare the growth rate with that of other firms in the same timeframe. If the company is already at the limits of the growth patterns, reconsider your buy decision.

An alternative approach is offered by Bruce Greenwald at Columbia University but Montier’s sympathies lie with Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital who says: “You can’t predict, you can prepare.” Meaning that you need to know where you are even if you don’t know where you are going for sure. And to be sure of where you are, you need to do your homework yourself.

 

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

USDINR – Does a Long Call Condor make sense?

The Avg. True Range of USDINR is 1.06 with volatility coming in at 0.24. An October 62.0/62.5/63.0/63.5 Long Call Condor will allow you to bet on the Rupee staying within a range.

USDINR Long Call Condor

The market value is coming in at Rs. -155.00 but as you can see from the payoff diagram, the max profit is upwards of Rs. 500.

The Rupee will move if Rajan or Chidambaram announce something about controlling CAD or tinkering with the rates. Is Rs. 155 enough compensation for the Rajan risk?

 

[stockquote]ATULAUTO[/stockquote]

The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: Don’t Listen to the Experts

Stop Listening to the Experts!

“Too much of anything can destroy you.” Famous words from the City of Lost Souls. And how true they are! James Montier, author of The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your worst enemy, doles out more cheer for us in Chapter 4. This time he uses unequivocal research data to turn the spotlight on another human vulnerability that makes us shoddy investors. It’s “over-confidence.”

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

The key lesson from this chapter wasn’t a very happy one for me. In fact, it was depressingly accurate, as proven by history. Let me explain.

Research proves that people (and I include myself here) often take dimwitted, brash, even inhumane actions if it conforms to an authority figure’s opinion or instruction. So tremendous is the influence of authority that it completely overrides our capacity to self-judge and cogitate.

Montier gives a chilling example: In the 1960s, Stanley Milgram conducted experiments to understand why ordinary people executed the detestable policies of leaders in World War II. A scenario was recreated where a “teacher” in authoritative attire instructed a “student” to press switches that increasingly raised the voltage level of shocks applied to “learners.” Voltage levels were clearly marked on the switches with descriptions ranging from “Slight” to “Danger: Severe Shock” to “XXX.” The students were told that that the aim of the experiment was to study the effect of punishment on learning and memory.

One would think that no student would have gone beyond the “Extreme Intensity Shock” level, especially since shock deliveries were accompanied by auditory reactions of the student that ranged from grunts to agonized screams. But what do you think happened?

Shockingly, 100% of the “ordinary people” willingly went up to 135V either themselves or by instructing another person, a stranger to them. This level was beyond the point where the learner asks to be released. Almost 80% were ready to go up to 280V where they could hear screams and 62% were willing to go up to XXX.

Such is the dangerous, brain-debilitating influence of authority.

And what is authority really? Usually, nothing more than over-confidence delivered with aplomb. Doctors do it all the time as do politicians and investment experts on Dalal Street. They get away with making fools of us because we get taken in by authority.

Montier warns us to be skeptical of experts, especially if they are fund managers. Take the example of Joe Granville, legendary market-timer and technical analyst. He started off well and gained credibility but the consistency of his predictions soon wore off. While his skill fumbled, his confidence did not. As long as he kept up his showmanship and appeared confident of his outlook, he was never short of gullible believers.

Montier outlines another experiment. Students and fund managers were pitted against each other to test stock-picking skills. Each team was handed research data on each blue-chip stock – name, industry, and prior 12 months’ performance. The students claimed 59% confidence in their skills and the professionals 65%. Not surprisingly, the students performed sub-optimally at less than 50%, relying on guessing games. But fire and brimstone! The professionals picked the right stock less than 40% of the times!

This happened because of the professionals’ over-confident reliance on “other knowledge” apart from what was handed to them. These are the very people who feature across media, glibly advising us on our investment strategies. Why, we’d be better off playing tic-tac-toe ourselves!

So we’re back to the game plan. Beat this hurdle by sticking to your investment plan, disregarding expert drones, and ignoring what others are doing.

But I can’t end this review without an interesting mention (it’s too irresistible): Turns out that men are more prone to over-optimism and over-confidence. They are not only worse investors than women but also a bad influence during investment decision-making. Don’t believe me? All hail to Montier and his penchant for research results! Zoom in to Chapter 4.

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

Weekly Recap: The Market for Lemons

nifty weekly performance heatmap

Nifty ended the week +2.76% (INR) +5.31% (USD) as both the markets and INR rallied on the back of the non-taper announcement from the US Fed.

Index Performance

Realty took a hit yesterday on the back of RBI’s 25bps rate hike (previously: here)

indexperf.2013-09-13.2013-09-20

Top winners and losers

SRTRANSFIN +13.54%
JSWSTEEL +17.30%
YESBANK +26.62%
RANBAXY -26.98%
GSKCONS -7.04%
BHEL -5.15%
All over the place, as the market tries to make up its mind…

ETFs

BANKBEES +5.05%
JUNIORBEES +3.13%
PSUBNKBEES +2.83%
NIFTYBEES +2.81%
GOLDBEES +1.58%
INFRABEES -4.55%
Banks rallied on the back of “no-taper” but are likely to give up most of their gains as RBI’s tightening stance sinks in…

Advancers and Decliners

adline2.2013-09-13.2013-09-20

Yield Curve

What exactly did the RBI do? Short term-yields have actually come down in spite of the 25bps increase in repo-rate. Ajay Shah tries to explain the head-scratcher here: The RBI has just intensified the muddle.

yieldCurve.2013-09-13.2013-09-20

Sector Performance

sectorperf.2013-09-13.2013-09-20

Thought for the weekend

Markets characterized by asymmetric information between sellers and buyers commonly resulted in declining quality of products offered for sale. In a market where the quality of products for sale is difficult to determine (such as used cars), if the majority of offerings are low quality “lemons,” buyers will come to distrust sellers and drive the average transaction price down to the “lemon price.” In this environment, the sellers of high quality used cars will only be offered lemon prices, since buyers can’t tell the difference. And since lemon prices are below the true value of the high quality vehicles, the sellers of good used cars will choose not to sell, eventually resulting in a market with only lemons being offered for sale.

Source: The market for idiocy

Ginormous USDINR chart

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