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INVESTOR BEHAVIOUR AND BENCHMARKS Presentation to Finansmarkedsfondet Executive Board Sari Carp Norwegian School of Management (BI) 8 December 2005
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PART I: Background on Behavioural Finance
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Isaac Newton (losing investor in the South Sea Bubble): “I can calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people.”
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Three Viewpoints on Market Efficiency (borrowed from Richard Thaler) 1)Efficient Market Zealot (vanishing breed) Security prices are always equal to intrinsic value. Price movements are random, and hence unpredictable. 2)Behavioural Finance Zealot (figment of EMZs’ imaginations) Prices depend only on market psychology. It is easy to predict price movements. 3)Sensible Middle Ground (nearly everyone) Prices are highly correlated with intrinsic value, but sometimes diverge significantly. It is sometimes possible to predict prices, but generally not with great precision.
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The Development of Behavioural Finance Research Documentation of anomalies Theory building: Economics + Psychology Testing of theories Experimental Empirical
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“Bounded” Rationality Decision Making Rules = Heuristics Biases Market Imperfections = Anomalies
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PART II: Investor Behaviour and Benchmarks
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Psychology of Benchmarking Fundamental human desire to evaluate one’s own abilities Cannot assess abilities directly, so evaluate the result of abilities; i.e., performance Even if performance can be measured unambiguously (e.g. time to run a race), how do we know if it’s good? compare with others’ times If an objective, non-social criterion exists, then evaluation relative to others is not used Focus on a reference point, or goal, decreases as the difference between it and one’s own ability increases
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Antecedents Prospect Theory (Kahneman and Tversky, 1979) March and Shapira, 1992 two reference points: aspiration and survival decision makers tolerate high risk when resources are below reference point, lower risk when resources are above reference point decision makers focus only on one of two reference points at a time ascribes value to gains and losses, not total wealth decision makers are risk averse in gains, risk seeking in losses pain of loss is sharper than pleasure of gain
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Model of Investor Risk Behaviour Performance (return) evaluated relative to two benchmarks: Success (S) Exit (X) In each period, investors choose portfolio risk according to: benchmark(s) focused on distance from focal benchmark(s)
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time 0 portfolios homog. in value, variance; heterog. in assets time t evaluation period ends; investors performing below Exit are eliminated from the market; all others may invest again time 1 portfolio values change according to random walk; investors choose risk strategies based on own returns relative to Success and Exit levels time 2 portfolio values change again; Success and Exit benchmark returns also change; investors restrategize based on new values Timeline
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Risk Taken Relative to Performance Benchmarks Success Focus Exit Focus Mixed Focus Risk Performance (Cumulative Return) X S
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Risk Taken Relative to Performance Benchmarks Risk Performance (Cumulative Return) X S
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Mutual Fund Manager Data actively managed (no index funds) single country focus Offshore 787 funds (Datastream) 25 countries all equity 1993-2002 U.S. 7,606 funds (CRSP) equity and bond 2001-2002
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Results from Fund Manager Data Results support model; highly statistically significant Model holds across economic, political and legal contexts But…how can we know if benchmarking is driven by behavioural or compensation based factors?? By comparing individual and institutional investors, we can “factor out” the compensation based element
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VPS Data Unique in the world “Gold mine” for behavioural research!!! Some behavioural research has been done on similar databases from other Scandinavian countries…but, these databases are incomplete Very famous behavioural research has been done on an individual investor database from a U.S. brokerage firm…but, this database is both incomplete and biased
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VPS Data Complete database of ownership in Norwegian stock market 10 years of monthly portfolios for each investor Investors categorized as individual, financial institution, non-financial corporation, government or foreign investor Tracks each investor by ID over time, allowing comparisons of investment decisions under same conditions Eliminates sample bias
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Predicted Results on VPS Data Both professionals and individuals will take increased risk as their performance improves above the Success or Exit points; this result will be more pronounced for professionals Both groups will take increased risk as performance deteriorated below Success or Exit points; this result will also be more pronounced for professionals So, the pattern will be the same, but more extreme for professionals
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