Are Investors Just Dart-Throwing Monkeys?

Published in Investing Strategy on 27 January 2010

Being skilful helps, but you still need luck to be a great investor.

Michael Mauboussin, author of the new book Think Twice: Harnessing the Power of Counterintuition, believes that luck plays a large role in stock investing.

Why does this matter? Because Mauboussin is also the chief investment strategist of Legg Mason Capital Management, a leading US-based asset management company.

On a recent visit to Fool Global HQ, Mauboussin said, "When you place investing somewhere on that continuum of all skill and all luck, certainly I would argue there is a dimension of skill. I think that's demonstrable. [But] I think it probably skews more to the luck side than people are willing to admit."

While there may be a fair bit of luck involved, Mauboussin believes that if investors focus on improving their skills by improving their investment process, they can generate better returns more consistently.

A short-term win but a long-term losing strategy

Mauboussin gives the following example:

You're sitting at the blackjack table. You're sitting on a 17. You ask for a hit. You get a 4. Great outcome, but if you do that 100 times or 1,000 times you're almost assured to do very poorly. So by looking at the outcome, you really don't know how good the thinking was. In contrast, if you do have a proper process, you play that hand correctly for a long period of time, and you will do well.

So as an investor, if you're looking to match the market's returns, an indexing strategy makes sense. That way, you get exposure to megacap companies like BP (LSE: BP), Vodafone (LSE: VOD), and HSBC (LSE: HSBA).

But what if you're willing to take on the responsibility of picking and managing your own shares? In Think Twice, Mauboussin attempts to identify different types of situations in which investors find themselves at a crossroads when making an investing decision, understand the science behind them, and provide ideas for decision-making that will lead to positive outcomes.

Mauboussin's thesis is that investors should focus more on process than on outcome, because focusing on the process is the best assurance for obtaining a favourable outcome.

Applying "think twice" to your portfolio

Mauboussin recommends that investors take three concrete steps when making investment decisions.

First, he suggests creating an investment decision journal. Buy a notebook, and whenever you make an investment decision, write down the date, why you decided what you did, what you expect to happen, and your reasoning.

Mauboussin says that over time, this record will allow you to audit your decisions. "One of the powerful forces [as far as] human biases is the hindsight bias, which is [that] once we know how things unfolded, we think we knew before with much greater probability than we did," he says. "So this counters that. It forces you to think through how you thought about your decisions and evaluate those decisions."

Second, Mauboussin recommends developing a checklist for investing. It should tie in with your objectives and the kinds of investment vehicles you're going to use.

Third, the expert says investors should develop what he calls a "pre-mortem." The idea behind this is that before you make a decision, you should pretend that time has passed and that your decision turned out badly. Then write down why the decision went wrong.

Mauboussin says when people think this way, they can identify up to 30% more factors that lead to poor outcomes. Most importantly, the key to this technique is that you haven't actually made the decision yet, so you're in a position to think about it more objectively.

Following this advice can make you a better investor -- even if getting the stellar results you want may take a little luck as well.

More on the economy and the markets:

> If you're in the market for buying shares, consider opening an online broker account with The Motley Fool's Share Dealing Service. You can buy and sell shares in real time for a flat rate of just £10. Click here to find out how you can open an account for free today. There is no obligation to trade.

> A version of this article, written by Jennifer Schonberger, was originally published on Fool.com. It has been updated by Bruce Jackson.

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Comments

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lotontech 27 Jan 2010 , 11:40am

If one believes that the outcome of investment or trading decisions is pure luck, and you therefore have a 50-50 chance of picking the right stock (or index) at the right time, then you cannot win this game by picking more winners than losers.

But you can still win a 50-50 game if your 'wins' are bigger than your 'losses'; which is why "running profits" (using a not-too-close Trailing Stop Order) and "cutting losses" (using a tight initial Stop Order) is IMO the most important technique for traders and investors (yes, investors) to learn.

If you can also increase your odds of picking winners through skill, all the better.

BarrenFluffit 28 Jan 2010 , 10:56am

Interesting. The dart throwing monkeys are not incentivised as investors are. Thought experiments and exercises have the benefit of being cheap to do but it would be very hard to work out their cost/benefit returns.

guykguard 28 Jan 2010 , 8:36pm

Is it just me who thinks that, for investors and traders alike, there's never one "right time" but there are always two "right times": when to get in and when to get out?
AFAIK, lotontech's refrain on stop losses can't help much with the right time to step in, so are they that useful? If they were, why doesn't everyone use them all the time?
To count on "sa sacrée majesté, le hasard" to save one's bacon once is asking her a lot. To expect her to do it twice is close to believing there are fairies at the bottom of the garden.
Can't recall the exact quote but it's something like "(good) luck accrues most to those who are best prepared." Luck cannot be anticipated, surely, but anyone can choose to be well prepared.

RobinnBanks 01 Feb 2010 , 4:19pm

Failing to plan is planning to fail.

bpretoria 03 Feb 2010 , 10:19am

As Gary Player once remarked "the harder I practice the luckier I get"

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