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Koon Yew Yin's Investing Method - Chapter 5 (Part 2): Solutions to Addressing the Mental Pitfalls

Koon Yew Yin
Publish date: Fri, 30 Mar 2018, 11:06 AM
Koon Yew Yin
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An official blog in i3investor to publish sharing by Mr. Koon Yew Yin.

All materials published here are prepared by Mr. Koon Yew Yin

5.2     Part 2: Solutions to Addressing the Mental Pitfalls

 

It is crucially important not to let psychological factors interfere with economic rationality in investment decision making

Bill Ackman

 

Having discussed about how stumbling into behavioural pitfalls can lead us astray, we can deduce that investing is more to do with the art – of dealing with human emotions and behaviours – and less to do with the science. Our emotions such as greed, fear, joy, pride, exuberance, frustration, impatience and anxiety can be great obstacles to our success in investing. Our swing of mood, irrational thoughts, biases, fallacies, illogical decisions, illusions, paradoxes and self-defence mechanisms can affect the outcomes of our investments. The combination of the above-mentioned pitfalls is a perfect recipe for the devastating outcome.

 

Although having the fundamental value investing and technical analysis knowledge is important, mastering the art of managing our emotions, behaviours and consciousness is the key to successful investing. The stock market is really a jungle out there. You will be mauled by “tigers” if you are not equipped with the necessary investing tools to survive. Your survival in investing requires far more than analytical skills. You need to have the right temperament, mentality, habit, thinking and plan to succeed in the market. The market always swings from one end to the other. In the long run, if you stick to your guns, understand human behavioural biases, avoid falling into the psychological pitfalls, follow some of the solutions I have outlined below and managed to elude those unnecessary blunders I have discussed earlier on, you should be able to do well with your investments.

 

It is far safer to project a continuation of the psychological reactions of investors than it is to project the visibility of the companies themselves

David Dreman

 

The psychologist far more than the economist may be of help in deciding when to buy

Phil Fisher

 

5.2.1     Learn to understand yourself

 

"To know thyself is the beginning of wisdom."

Socrates

 

People always ask me how I achieve such a spectacular performance in my investments and if I have any supernatural abilities to accurately predict the movements of stock price. Well, like many other investors, I do not possess any crystal ball to foretell the future and am unable to cast magic spell like Harry Potter. The only incantation I know – Abracadabra – does not even weave its magic on my investments. However, I do share a few important traits with other master investors that enable us to outperform the markets. One of the traits is self-awareness. From my observation, all successful investors have high self-awareness.

 

Having high self-awareness, in this case, is referred to knowing our personalities, strengths, competency zones, limits, vulnerabilities, objectives, self-interests and motivations. This is an essential step to achieving unbeaten performance. By developing a deep appreciation of ourselves, we are able to formulate suitable investing strategies and golden rules that fit our characteristics and investing styles, enable us to navigate our way through the up and down cycles of our investing journeys, make us undeterred by temporary failures and enhance the ability to overcome our behavioural biases. That’s why Bernard Baruch once said “only as you know yourself can your brain serve you as a sharp and efficient tool. Know your own failings, passions, and prejudices so you can separate them from what you see.”

 

There are many ways you can do to get to know yourself better. One of the methods to understand your persona is by taking Myers–Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) test. The test is specifically designed to identify your preferences, attitudes and psychological functions (extraversion, sensing, thinking, judgment, introversion, intuition, feeling, perception and etc.) and help defining your temperament (sanguine: enthusiastic, active, and social; choleric: independent, decisive, goal oriented; melancholic: analytical, detail oriented, deep thinker and feeler; and phlegmatic: relaxed, peaceful, quiet) Source: Wikipedia. In general, extroverted investors, with thrill-seeking gene and opportunity-oriented strategies, like Peter Lynch, Robert Arnott and Mark Mobius, do exceptionally well in bull markets. On the other hand, introverts like Warren Buffett, Jeremy Grantham, Charles Schwab and Bill Miller, who are mostly contrarian, passive, thorough, careful, risk-averse, calm and patient investors and enjoy in solitude, do better in bear markets.

 

Another approach to understanding yourself better is by performing self-assessment through the continuous experimentation and reflection of your philosophy and strategies. The reflection on your philosophy and strategies helps you identify your strengths and weaknesses. For example, when you reflect on your decisions and actions in your investments, it indirectly reveals to you your tolerance limit, mental power, circle of competence, competency level, comfort zone and etc. You will be a wiser investor as you reduce your blind spots and make better decisions. Moreover, it allows you to determine your boundaries so that so that you won’t go outside your zone of competence and are able to minimise risk to an acceptable level.

 

5.2.2     Stick to your golden rule

 

Sacrifice money rather than principle.

Mayer Amschel Rothschild

 

If you took our top fifteen decisions out, we’d have a pretty average record. It wasn’t hyperactivity, but a hell of a lot of patience. You stuck to your principles and when opportunities came along, you pounced on them with vigor.”

Charlie Munger

 

Having a good understanding of yourself is a vital step to improving your investing performance, but it does not provide you any guidelines on how the stock selection should be made to meet your objectives and to achieve your mission. Unfortunately, there is no “one-size-fits-all” rule for everyone to score a home run in the market. Therefore, you need to have a set of your own investing principles or rules, which is developed based on your risk tolerance limit, personal traits, strategy as well as your areas of competence, as a guideline to pick the right stocks for your portfolios and adhere strictly to the rules.

 

Study shows that unemotional investors who stick to their golden rules and game plans always walk-away with magnificent and covetable returns. Moreover, sticking to your golden rules allows you to sense danger early so that you don’t put your capital at risk. Your golden rules indirectly provide you a strong defence system, in which the rules usually dictate the conditions and criteria each stock must meet before it qualities a place in your portfolio such as the potential of business expansion, future earnings’ trajectory, enterprise and earnings multiples, profit margins, cash flow trend, financial heath and management’s integrity, so that you can be sure of the odds are not stacked against you.

 

Further, following our golden rules can help to address terminal paralysis – a syndrome of inability to pull trigger when an opportunity arises – and to prevent us from falling into the trap of representation bias – a tendency to judge the probability of an event or a hypothesis based on the resemblance of the event or hypothesis to the commonsense data and past memory. For example, in the case of representation bias, turnaround companies are often stereotyped as doomed-to-failure businesses. Their potential to revive is often overlooked by the market and is regarded as an impossible miracle. However, that is an area where enormous return can be expected if the turnaround company that we invested in does exceptionally well. Had I not stuck to my golden rule and allowed my vision be clouded by the cognitive bias, I would have missed out many good opportunities.

 

Another example of representative bias is that people always associate blue chip companies with winning stocks. They blindly believe that this type of companies will do well forever and buying dear does not matter. Long-term investors who bought British American Tobacco Berhad (BAT, which is regarded as a blue chip stock) around Rm75/share definitely have their fingers badly burned. In retrospect, investors should have avoided the stock at all costs, had they studied the earnings growth potential of BAT in 2014. The rampant and escalating contraband cigarette trade had started eating into the market share of BAT in 2014 and would have a profound impact on its earnings. It was not difficult to fathom the decreasing price trend of BAT if you had analysed its sales and earnings from a business perspective. By sticking to my golden rule – only buy undervalued good stocks with high profit growth potential – I managed to spot many opportunities and dangers early, and avoid the predilection for stocks with beautiful stories and other cognitive biases.

 

It remained true that sound investment principles produced generally sound results.

Benjamin Graham

 

5.2.3     Deliberation and hard-work

 

The only way to gain an edge is through long and hard work."

Li Lu

 

Despite our frequent stumbles on the above-mentioned biases such as overreaction, over-optimism and framing effect, study shows that our investment performance can be greatly improved if we have done adequate preparation before any “war” breaks out. For instance, to avoid getting caught up in a buying frenzy, we can spend some time to search for our targets early when we are in a rational state, so that we won’t rush to buy a stock in the irrational modes of thought just because all market participants and pundits shout buy. Things we can do to search for our targets include, but are not limited to, reading annual reports and financial statements, performing a comparison study and visiting companies.

 

After studying the business of a company, if the company is found to have a bright earnings prospect, we should put the target in a list called “wish list” or “watch list”. By doing so, we have screened out all the stocks that do not meet our selection criteria. We then monitor the price of the stocks in our watch list daily. Remember, we only have to monitor them daily, not hourly, so that we have more time to search for other good deals and for other matters (i.e. your day-job and family matters). When it comes to buying, we only buy the stocks in our wish list, not any speculative counters (or “goreng” stocks).

 

After buying the stocks, we then review their performance regularly. The reason why we perform the review is to avoid getting trapped in a crowded theatre when everyone yells fire in panic state later. When the tide and facts change, we change our perceptions, price targets, and decisions immediately to adapt to the new situations, so that we do not steadfast to the old ideas which have become obsolete and to avoid falling into the trap of anchoring bias. That’s why Lord Keynes once said “When the facts change, I change my mind, what do you do sir?” If we always stay abreast of a company’s development and progress, we won’t be missing out any buying or selling opportunities and should be able to seize the opportunities to “move every piece” ahead of the market. In essence, we make hay whilst the sun shines.

 

Most important, never follow any tips from your friends, analysts’ reports or news blindly. You should maintain your intellectual independence and rely on your research work. Your friends are more likely to be wrong than right. Study shows that about 90% people lose money in the stock market. Your friends may not be willing to come to your rescue when you are “stranded” in the depressed counter later for listening to their tips.  Analysts, on the other hand, always report something good to support their own interests. Don’t fall victim to their traps. Additionally, their forecasts are seldom right. Be more sceptical and take the reports with a pinch of salt. Some of them have very little or no skin in the game. They are paid to write for the companies. Moreover, some of the tips given by opinion makers and market pundits are inaccurate ones. Whilst the news reported by media may not be outdated ones, the positive factors may have already been priced in when you buy the particular stocks. Traders will begin to dump their positions once the news is released. Keep in mind that market participants always buy the rumours and sell the news. Therefore, you should be wary when you are dealing with the type of stocks, especially those in a rigged market, that have gone up substantially before any good news are released.

 

To avoid making any dubious moves, you should reduce the level of risks to an acceptable level before plunking down your hard-earned money for any companies you have never run before. The important thing is don’t bury your head in the sand. Uncertainty is always there. You should embrace it, not ignore it. Before buying them, try to understand as much as you possibly can about the businesses, including the future of their industries, their capacity for business expansion, profit margins and profit growth potential. The uncertainty stems from missing information can be reduced by devoting more time to conduct research (to search for the missing piece of the puzzle). Noisy information can be eliminated by filtering the unreliable and non-related information. Conflicting information can be addressed by finding the discrepancies between the two types of information and making an informed judgement. You should also learn to handle the internal conflict in your mind and keep focusing on facts. In the worst case, if you can’t handle any of the uncertainties, especially when the uncertainty level is exceptionally high, stake is high and reward is low, you should just give it a pass.

 

Study shows that our emotional intelligence can also be improved if we put in more effort to manage it and to understand the behaviours of the market. In order to avoid selling a stock in panic with the crowd when everyone is terrified after a big drop, we can always prepare for any unforeseen circumstances before the reversal occurs. For instance, we can perform pre-mortem before executing a trade to find out what could cause a decline in the price of the stock, anticipate the respond of other market participants and learn from the simulated experience how to react to a bad situation. This will prevent us from risking our own money, prepare us better for any unforeseen developments and allow us to control our emotions well. The second benefit is that when we devote more time to empathise with other market participants, we will know their objectives and feelings. Our stock market is made up of trading and investing participants. We will be able to anticipate their next move, deploy our plan and respond to the conditions better if we understand their behaviours.

 

5.2.4     Maintain the discipline

 

You must have the patience and conviction to stick with what is, by definition, an unpopular bet.”

Whitney Tilson

 

In order to avoid being swayed by other’s errors or ill-intentions, and to achieve satisfactory performance in investing, it is important that we maintain our discipline in investing. Once we have established our golden rules and devised our investing plans, we should follow our own systems closely, not the crowd.  For example, you should use the investing strategy that suits you the most, not the complex financial models and strategy used by some fund managers. Instead of buying hot-stocks of the month, you should only buy the stocks the meet your selection criteria.

 

People will feel nervous when their holdings plummet in price or get greedy when their holdings are in winning positions. They always overreact to noise. When their friends shout “buy the stock before it shoots up”, they have a tendency to go big into the stock. Instead of following your friends, you should maintain a level head when the market is in the state of panic or jubilation. Study showed that level headed investors always make wiser investment decisions than people who are less emotionally intelligent. Also, price volatility is a part of the investing game. If you can ignore price fluctuation and the noise and be prudent when making important decisions, you will do well in your investments.

 

Based on my observation, people also always fail to pull trigger on their investing ideas as they spend too much time to think about the company’s future when opportunity arises. Likewise, they will be hesitating to sell their holdings or cut loss when the fundamentals of the business have changed, as they gamble on with a hope that their losses will be recovered when the share prices rebound. To prevent procrastination, you should buy immediately when a stock meets your criteria and sell immediately when its fundamentals have changed. Do not hold on the losers when their business fundamentals have changed. For example, when companies report decreasing revenues or sustained losses due to supply glut issue, you should sell your stocks immediately. Limit your loss will ensure that you stay out of the companies. Bear in mind that the first loss is the easiest loss. You need a 100% gain to recover a 50% loss if you do not follow your cut-loss rule when the market slices it.

 

In addition, you should maintain your discipline – to be patient if you have nothing to buy or to sell. Very often successful investors get paid for doing nothing. This is one of the best strategies in investing. Charlie Munger calls it sit-on-your-ass investing. On the contrary, if you trade too frequently, your wealth will be dwindled by the commissions charged by your brokerage house for your in and out activities. If you feel bored, instead of getting in and out, you can use the time to search for more targets and prepare some dry powder for the subsequent round of bargain hunting.

 

5.2.5     Concentrate on the facts

 

You need to probe a whole raft of numbers and facts, searching for confirmation or contradiction.”

John Neff

 

To avoid falling trap into the common behavioural biases, disciplined superinvestors usually pay more heed to the facts of a stock, not the beauty of its story. They look for stocks selling substantially lower than their business value. They look at the earnings growth potentials, current earnings, earnings trend, dividend yield and cash flow of a company, so as to make an informed judgement and to exploit the emotions of Mr. Market.

 

If you follow the principle of those superinvestors of focusing on the numbers, use logical thinking coupled with business sense to analyse opportunities and buy stocks with tremendous profit growth potential and with low downside risk, you are less likely to be penalised when the stocks are not performing for a couple of quarters, as the pessimism has already been priced in. In addition, your hard-work will be paid off when the companies report increasing profits as the positive earnings surprise will help lifting the share price. Further, if you make judgements based on the facts, it is not difficult to spot a bubble in a stock.

 

Even if you do not have strong financial acumen to accurately assess the value of a business, the least what you should do is to have an unbiased perception of the market, stick to the facts and avoid following the irrational behaviours of the others. And most importantly, you should ignore the estimates based on straight line extrapolation and take those research reports published in online forums with a grain of salt. Some of the reports are written with ill-intention to hoodwink us into buying the stocks at inflated prices from the syndicates when in fact the companies have been found with rats infested in the engines. Whether or not you find the reports sensible, you should perform your own due diligence before buying into the stocks. In many cases, the morsels left may not be worth your money.

 

What I try to do is focus on the facts of today.”

Bruce Berkowitz

 

5.2.6     Tap into your powerful intuition

 

Intuition is more than just a hunch. It resembles a hidden supercomputer in the mind that you’re not even aware is there. It can help you do the right thing at the right time if you give it a chance. In fact, over time your own trading experience will help develop your intuition so that major pitfalls can be avoided.”

Michael Steinhardt

 

Intuition is a powerful tool that provides us a cue accessing to the vast amount of information stored in our memory and to protect us from dangers. Unfortunately, intuition is very often ignored by maladjustive investors and is always deemed as a noise that impedes their valuation of companies by this group of investors. A good decision making process should not be depended solely on the deliberative mode of thought or reflective mind; intuition too should be made use of in order to achieve a better performance in investing.

 

In investing, you certainly do not want to have your lifetime savings stuck in a stock that has been hard hit by the industry downturn or with a serious oversupply problem, even though it has a very low debt level, high net working capital and a healthy balance sheet. When you analyse the company’s business and financial health, your deliberative thought could only tell you that the balance sheet is clean and that the company is less likely to get into financial distressed problems, but it doesn’t tell you anything more than that. It is your intuition, which formed through years of learning and experience, could help you judge if it would be a value trap and could tell you that you need to hold the stock for many years, if not decades, for you to see the light at the end of the tunnel. For instance, currently there are many property developing company shares selling below their NTA (net tangible assets value) due to the oversupply of properties in every town and city in Malaysia. Yes, it is safe to buy some of them as their balance sheets are clean. But my intuition tells me that their prices will remain depressed for many years until the property market turns the corner. If I make my judgement solely based on fundamental or technical analysis, most likely I will get trapped in the stocks for many years.

 

In an interview at the University of California, Berkeley, Daniel Kahneman told his host and audiences that intuition is also critical to the careers of many people, including firemen and nurses. He further shared the findings of his research partner, Gary Klein, that “a fireman on the roof suddenly yelling to his company, let’s get out of here, just before the house explodes, and then it turns out he wasn’t aware of when he was doing it, but his feet were warm and that was the cue that triggered the sense that something very dangerous was going on just underneath them.” According to Professor Kahneman, even experienced statisticians use intuition and heuristics to solve simple problems generally instead of the complex mathematical models they have mastered.

 

Similarly, in investing, most of the successful investors do not buy stocks based on the discounted cash flow of the stocks. What they normally use is a set of heuristics called the rule of thumb or criteria (some simple calculation) coupled with intuition to judge if a stock will make a profitable investment at a particular time. Based on Charlie Munger’s observation, “Warren (Buffett) often talks about these discounted cash flows, but I’ve never seen him do one. If it isn’t perfectly obvious that it’s going to work out well if you do the calculation, then he tends to go on to the next idea.” Intuition comes from our recognition of patterns such as trends, similarities and differences. It is built through years of hard-work, focus and experience. On the other hand, Wikipedia defines heuristics as simple, efficient rules which people often use to form judgments and make decisions. These information and rules form a mental map, which seasoned investors always use to match with the current development and make the best decisions. That’s why superinvestors can make judgements fairly quickly and invest with conviction without having their performance being compromised.

 

Superinvestors like Michael Steinhardt, Bernard Baruch and George Soros, always rely on their instincts (some call them “animal instincts”) for important investing decisions. One of the ways how they tap into their intuitions is by monitoring their body response. Acute back pain, rapid heartbeat with anxiety, throbbing headache or nausea with disgust is perceived as a signal of impending peril by some of them. The signals are stored as somatic markers (feelings associated with emotions) in probably their ventromedial prefrontal cortex. The signal is usually triggered in their brains when they went through something unpleasant they have experienced in the past or they encounter something in stark contrast to their objectives. That’s how their nervous system responds to their emotions – by triggering an acute pain to the physiological system, as both of which are inextricably connected. The claim is attested by the findings of a group of psychologists of the University of Virginia that “when we feel heartache, we are experiencing a blend of emotional stress and the stress-induced sensations in our chest—muscle tightness, increased heart rate, abnormal stomach activity and shortness of breath.”

 

That said, in some situations, relying solely on our intuitions can lead to some cognitive biases. For example, an investor who relies heavily on his or her intuition, refuses to pay heed to counterfactual analyses and contradictory views (which will mar his or her hypotheses), and insists that his or her intuition indicates that the same patterns will be repeated again are highly susceptible to overconfidence bias, which may result in a mediocre performance. Therefore, my advice is to avoid making judgements purely based on gut instinct or purely use heuristics as a solution to your problems (as heuristics can sometimes turn into harmful biases). You should guard it with logical thinking as well as with adequate research and analysis. Experience can only help us to a certain extent; it can’t solve all of our problems. The most important thing is to avoid extrapolating unrelated experience to our decision making process. It will result in pareidolia.

 

Also, despite the fact that the combination of intuitions and heuristics works well under general circumstances and help investors make sound decisions, new investors are not encouraged to follow their intuitions. Their experience in this field is too little to help them make good decisions. It takes effort and years of experimentation and experience to form the database in their minds and reliable intuitions. Therefore, new investors are usually advised to perform due diligence – by conducting sufficient research and analysis – prior to placing their wagers on stocks and should continue doing so until a massive wealth of experience and expertise in this area are accumulated to enable the reliable intuitions be formed.

 

5.2.7     Close the empathy gap

 

Successful investing is anticipating the anticipations of others

John Maynard Keynes

 

Merely knowing how to read tapes and financial statements or value companies is not enough. You need to have a good grasp of the market participants’ “heartbeat”. Even if you have an MBA or a PhD in finance, you can only use your finance knowledge to a certain extent, to estimate the intrinsic value of a company as guidance and to look for ballpark figures of a company’s earnings, not the precise numbers, let alone the exact price of a stock. In investing, you need to know that apart from the value of a business, greed, fear and other psychological factors have also been largely embedded in its stock price. This is the area where the largest chunk of gain can be expected, but it is basically ignored by market participants. Keep in mind that stock price is dictated by human’s animal spirits. If the spirits are low, fear and pessimism levels are high and confidence levels plummet, it’s highly likely that the stock price will fall. This is more evident in turbulent markets.

 

To have a good grasp of the market participants’ emotions, we need to have a combination of good cognitive empathy and emotional empathy. Being good at cognitive empathy means we are able to put ourselves in someone else’s shoe, experience what they are going through and see problems from their perspective without necessarily feeling their joys or pains. Being good at emotional empathy, on the other hands, means we can feel the emotions of other people so that we understand the feelings and reactions of them but without having ourselves overwhelmed by their emotions. By being good at both, we are able to simulate the same problems people encounter and the same emotions they have, know what they are thinking, understand their states of mind, and anticipate the responses of the crowd in the market when reading their comments and analysing the trade volume and chart pattern of a stock.

 

Having the ability to close the empathy gap is also helpful in interpreting data stated in financial reports, knowing the direction of a company based their corporate strategy, getting more hints on the hidden agenda of management’s actions and having an appreciation how the market perceives the strategy of the company. For example, when a company proposes a private placement, it probably signifies that the company is raising funds to expand the businesses, repay loans or for other purposes. Upon reading the announcement, the market will naturally sell it down at a loss without investigating the objective further, as it is deemed diluting the existing shareholders’ interests. To be a good investor, we must be able to control our emotions, gather all relevant information, read between the lines in the proposal to get a hint and perform a thorough analysis of the proposal before arriving at the final conclusion. If you find out that the private placement is beneficial to both the company and the existing shareholders, and you are in a resourceful state of mind (calmed, centred, confident), you should be able to exploit social awareness to your advantage for the emotional blunders committed by other people. Moreover, the ability enables us to find out if a management team is running the company only to set themselves up for life without creating value for shareholders. It also allows us to get rid of a troubled stock after going through its reports and analysing the management’s actions so that we are not there when the shit hits the fan.

 

5.2.8     Maintain humility

 

You keep an open mind, keep trying to learn, stay humble and keep trying to learn from your mistakes and other people's mistakes.”

Ken Shubin Stein

 

I would recommend being humble. Be open-minded, and do not be conceited.”

Sir John Templeton

 

People always fall prey to self-serving bias. They ascribe their success to their own talents and hard-work and point the finger at external factors for their failures. For example, some of the managers always push blames to their subordinates for their teams’ poor performance in order to avoid accountability. This type of cognitive bias is not just commonly seen in the workplace, but it is also typically observed in the field of investing. It is a sad but true fact that all of us are imperfect. Nonetheless, people simply refuse to own up to committing their blunders, when they have erred in their decisions, due in part to their big ego and embarrassed perception.

 

To be a better investor, all of us must be willing to recognise our limitations and weaknesses and continue to learn. As we are not infallible, we should look for flaws in our hypotheses and spend time to think what can go wrong with our hypotheses. To prevent being overconfident, we must be more open minded, always listen to second opinions or opposite views and seek for constructive feedbacks and advice before making any judgements. If we have a tendency to make investment decision from a more emotional perspective, we should identify the biases and fallacies we always stumble upon and correct them immediately.

 

Whilst all these efforts seems to humble us, they prevent us from repeating the same slipups and pave the way for us to be successful in investing. Further, humility, which encourages us to avoid distorting facts and evidences to conform to our views or justify our errors and make inference and judgements based on facts, indirectly make us a rational investor. Also, it prevents our decisions and investments to be ravaged by our ego, harmful emotions and other psychological biases. For example, I noticed that people often refuse to admit their slipups and feel embarrassed to buy back the stocks they have sold by mistake earlier on, even though the growth of the companies is still intact. In addition, status quo bias also prevents them from buying back what they have sold earlier on. If they can see their cognitive bias, are willing to admit their mistakes and buy the stocks back immediately, they should be able to capitalise on the opportunity and make a heck a lot of money out of it.

 

We think humility is essential, especially concerning the ability to know the future. Before we act on a forecast, we ask if there's good reason to think we're more right than the consensus view already embodied in prices. As to macro projections, we never assume we're superior.”

Howard Marks

 

5.2.9     Keep an investment journal

 

I’ve come to believe a personal investment diary is a step in the right direction in coping with these pressures, in getting to know yourself and improving your investment behavior.”

Barton Biggs

 

Some of you must be wondering why investors are advised to keep a journal (or diary) of their investing activities, even though investing has got nothing in connection with quality management, and yet it is a non-productive task. Sure, keeping a record of your investing activities doesn’t produce any direct positive return to your investments. But human is sometimes forgetful and vulnerable to mood swings. Our fluctuation of mood involuntarily changes the way we perceive the market and have an influence on our trades. For example, when our investments produce some gains, we tend to become happy and allow the emotions to overcome our rationality. Hence, we tend to take a higher risk and buy more shares when the price goes up. Don’t forget that our mood is contagious. The crowd will also be elated and buy even more when the price shoots through the roof. When the price takes a nosedive later we regret our decisions. If we don’t keep a journal of our investing activities, where do we get the recollection of how the blunders were made when we want to review our past decisions in future?     

 

In your journal, you can jot down your investment ideas, research, buying and selling price for each stock, reasons of buying or selling the stocks, emotional expressions or feelings and physical responses when you buy them. It should be noted that the journal should not be served reporting functions or be used to vent your frustration. If managed wisely, a good journal does not only allow you to review your decisions, know your states of mind, spot patterns, examine your competency, reflect on your mistakes and prevent you falling into the same snares in the future, it also helps you discover yourself through the “psychological mirror” and connect you to your inner world, including your wisdom and objectives in life, and enhance your learning. By understanding yourself better, you can refine your investing rules and formulate a suitable strategy and form a comprehensive checklist that could guide you better in your investing journey.

 

Keep an investment diary and re-read it from time to time but particularly at moments when there is tremendous exuberance and also panic. We are in a very emotional business, and any wisdom we can extract from our own experience is very valuable.”

Barton Biggs

 

5.2.10     Build your mental strength

 

Have the courage of your knowledge and experience. If you have formed a conclusion from the facts and if you know your judgement is sound, act on it – even though others may hesitate or differ.”

Benjamin Graham

 

By now I am sure you know the importance of having good investing principles. But not everyone has the ability to stick to their golden rules. People always find themselves having difficulty resist to the temptation of following the crowd to buy hot stocks when the market is in great excitement. Unless you intend to jump off the cliff with other lemmings, you should impose self-control in investing. Stop the gambling behaviour. It is akin to playing Russian roulette. You will get “killed” in investing if you don’t control your involuntary behaviour. The important thing is to avoid falling prey to hot-hand fallacy. In investing, winning the first and second bets does not guarantee further success in the next attempt. You will ruin your financial life if you place your wagers without ensuring that the odds are in your favour.

 

When the market takes a nosedive, you must use your mental power to control your emotions, remain upbeat and stay calm even after suffering some losses. Stick to your golden rule and keep improving it. Your golden rule is the only weapon that can help you make a killing and accumulate wealth in investing. Paying attention to the fluctuation of stock prices will not make you rich. Of course, you still need to have the courage to pull trigger when opportunity arises. The ability to execute a trade timely with conviction is essential to successful investing.

 

In addition, you should resist to trade when you are in emotionally unstable mood – be it thrilled, regret, angry or depressed. For example, in a rising market, you may be elated when your holdings are in a profitable position and you will have an inclination to buy more stocks regardless of their value. The influence of your emotions, which always hinders your investing success, will be put in check if you learn how to handle them well. Have a nap when you feel tired and take a deep breath when your brain is starved of oxygen or when you feel stressed. You will have difficulty to make rational investing decisions if your brain is overloaded. If you learn to tap your body’s self-healing mechanisms to help you stay clear headed before you make any important investing decisions, the likelihood of making high risk investments will be greatly reduced.

 

Whilst people are generally financially prudent when handling their hard-earned money, they have a tendency to spend extravagantly with the dividends and capital gains they earn from the stock market. No matter how good your performance is, the mental accounting pitfall would render the snowball effect futile if you do not control your mental properly by keeping the dividends and gains. Thus, you should not spend the dividends and gains that you earn in stock investments, unless you trade for a living. Keep the proceeds for the next bargain, so as to let the snowball effect creates its astonishment.

 

Last but not least, you should keep learning, reviewing your past investments and focus on improvement. Read more investing-related books when you are free. Benjamin Franklin once said “an investment in knowledge pays the best interest.” By continuing to learn, you understand yourself better. You will discover more of your weaknesses. Additionally, it expands the arena and façade areas of your Johari window and reduces your mental blind spots. Keep in mind that your learning does not end when you leave college. According to John J. Ratey, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, “The human brain’s amazing plasticity enables it to continually rewire and learn – not just through academic study, but through experience, thought, action and emotion.” And “genes and environment interact to continually change the brain from the time we conceived until the moment we die. And we, the owners – to the extent that our genes allow it – can actively shape the way our brains develop throughout the course of our lives.” And with the determination to continue learning and the perseverance for continuous improvement, you too can become a superinvestor!

 

 

Chapter Summary (Part 2)

 

  • Solutions to Addressing the Mental Pitfalls
  • Learn to understand yourself
  • Stick to your golden rule
  • Deliberation and hard-work
  • Maintain the discipline
  • Concentrate on the facts
  • Tap into your powerful intuition
  • Close the empathy gap
  • Maintain humility
  • Keep an investment journal
  • Build your mental strength
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