I recommend Andrew W. Lo’s Mit Finance course on I tunes U.
Lecture 19
Behavioral Finance : Watch the one on efficient markets 2
Are markets efficient?
Buffett says clearly no. They are subject to animal spirits. Market efficiency requires rationality which
comes and goes in waves. Behavioral
finance says people suffer from loss aversion, overconfidence, overreaction,
herding, and mental accounting.
Daniel Ellsberg,
most famous for releasing the Pentagon Papers in 1969 came up with the Ellsberg paradox. People will pay less for a gamble with less clear odds. When there is uncertainty about risk people
shy away. We are hard wired to avoid things we don’t understand because these could
kill you, to avoid hidden crocodiles.
That is why when markets get scary people shy away although the expected
return is increased.
Frank Knight looked at why entrepreneurs are paid so
much. He decided that it is because they
take on uncertainty and not just risk. Uncertainty is the risk that no one can
quantify e.g. Nanotechnology.
Lastly, people tend to see only what they are looking for.
Since people are unable to assess odds, they are susceptible
to be Dutch Booked.
It is though that his provides a limit to
irrationality. Smart people will take
advantage and the market will correct. An example is arbitrage.
Efficient market folks feel that market forces will force
people to be rational if there are enough rational people around.
However Keynes said the market can stay irrational longer
then you can stay solvent.
Antonio Damasio, a neurosurgeon, wrote a book DescartesError in which he argued that rationality stems from emotion. He
describes a patient who had a brain tumor removed. Although he tested normally in math or logic he
was unable to function in the world and quickly lost his job. After the surgery he had no emotion reactions
as shown by eye blink tests. You have
to be able to feel to act rational.
This relates to the triune brain. The reptile brain regulates heart rate and
vital functions. The mammalian brain sits over this and it regulates fear,
greed, love, and emotion. The hominid
brain or neocortex is responsible for language, math and logical
deliberation. Under the stress of shock such as loss of blood the reptile
brain shuts last. People faint but keep
breathing. In fact you can be brain
dead and continue breathing. Of the remaining
brains the hominid brain shuts down first when under stress. Evolution favors running from thetiger. Experiments have shown under stress or pain
the neocortex does not resume normal function for hours after an insult. Under stress, body shunts blood away from the
cortex. When stressed people cannot use
the cortex and don’t think.
That is why love makes you stupid.
Emotion is necessary for rationality but too much emotion
impairs rationality.
Best advice: Be clear
about your goals. Decide what you want
to achieve and ask will my current actions help or hinder the objectives.
Lo developed the Adaptive Market Hypothesis
He says that prices in the market reflect available
information and the number of species in the economy. Species means professionals, pension
managers, hedge fund managers, and individual investors. When
people are stressed either positive or negative, they are not rational.
This theory takes a biological view of markets. We are both creatures of our rational brains
and emotional brains.
Adaptive market theory properties are that:
Individuals act in their self-interest
They make mistakes
They learn and adapt
Competition drives adaptation and innovation
Natural selection shapes the market ecology
Evolution determines market dynamics
It takes negative feedback to cause us to learn and develop
adaptive heuristics or thought process shortcuts .
The implications of the Adaptive Market Hypothesis are that:
Risk reward is not stable because individual preferences are
not stable
Risk premiums are time varying. 2007 is different from 2008
Limited arbitrage (free lunches) exist from time to time
Strategies wax and wane
Adaptation and innovation are key to survival
Survival is all that matters
Market efficiency goes in cycles that depend on the
population of investors that are interacting with each other. These
cycles can be anticipated and perhaps some profit can be made.
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