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Cognitive biases are mental shortcuts that can lead us astray in various aspects of life, including the high-stakes world of finance and equity analysis. As investors and analysts navigate complex markets and make crucial decisions, they often fall prey to these hidden biases. In this article series, we will attempt to locate these biases, the environments they appear in, and how artificial intelligence (AI) can help us recognize and overcome them, ultimately leading to writing more objective investment research reports, and hence allowing clients to make more objective investment decisions.
In the first part of the series, we’ll delve deeper into specific biases identified in recent studies, how and why they emerge and their consequences.
Cognitive biases are mental shortcuts that have been engineered into us as survival mechanisms. These biases evolved to help our ancestors make quick decisions in dangerous or complex environments, conserve mental energy, and process vast amounts of information efficiently. However, in our modern world, particularly in complex domains like financial decision-making, these biases can lead to systematic errors in judgment.
Let’s examine a few that will directly affect the scope of this article:
While potentially beneficial in certain historical contexts, these biases can lead to suboptimal decision-making in modern financial markets. They stem from our brain’s attempt to process complex information efficiently, often at the expense of accuracy. Understanding these biases is crucial for investors and analysts seeking to make more objective, data-driven decisions in today’s fast-paced financial landscape.
Understanding cognitive biases is crucial in making objective observations and subsequent decisions in low-validity (i.e. events tend to be more unique and have less intrinsic patterns), high-noise environments such as capital markets. Biases lead to systematic errors in judgment, decision-making processes, and development of investment strategies.
Bias in Portfolio Composition and Trading
Let’s start with how cognitive biases affect our ability to compose and trade a portfolio. We refer to a seminal study by Barber and Odean (2001), published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, which analyzed the trading patterns of 35,000 households from 1991 to 1997. The study reveals several key finding including;
It’s clear that hidden biases affect our trading and composition performance. However, these biases are more easily recognisable (and thus correctable) because the feedback loop (i.e. gain/ loss) tends to be more short term. When it comes to observational analysis however, the feedback loops are longer and even more riddles with noise.
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