Making better choices
is not always this easy

 

Newsletter Archive

How Good do You Think You Are at Investing?

Posted On: Wednesday, March 1, 2023

How Good do You Think You Are at Investing?

Do you deliver better than average work at the office? Do you drive better than the average person on the road?

It is likely that you answered ‘yes’ to both of those questions.

There is a fair amount of research that finds that a majority of people will almost always rate themselves as ‘above average’ on these kinds of issues.

In 2018, a study found that 65% of Americans consider themselves of above average intelligence. A survey of 1 million high school students in 2005 reported that 70% of them believed that they were above average leaders. And a famous paper published all the way back in 1981 discovered that 88% of a sample of American graduate students and 77% of Swedish graduate students rated themselves as better-than-average drivers.


Our positive illusions

Statistically speaking, it is obvious that these responses can’t be accurate. By definition, a significant majority of any sample can’t be above average.

Humans, however, have a natural tendency to believe that they are better than they are. And, for the most part, this is not unhealthy. In a 2011 paper, researchers from the University of Amsterdam wrote:

“Mentally healthy people blissfully suffer from what are called positive illusions: they overestimate their abilities, as well as their control over events, and they underestimate their vulnerability to risk.”

However, this does come with its drawbacks. For example, surveys have found that as many as 88% of people use their mobile phones while they are driving, even though the risk is well known. One can assume that people do so anyway because they have a belief in their own superior driving abilities.


The money problem

Unfortunately, many people also overestimate how much they know about investing and finance. They think that they can make better decisions than the average person, and that they can beat the market.

This is not just among everyday investors. Professional fund managers have the same bias, even though they are also unlikely to be right.

Research over many decades has shown that most active managers don’t beat the market. The most recent S&P Indices vs Active (SPIVA) scorecard in the US shows that a little over 15% of US large-cap fund managers beat the S&P 500 over the past five years. Over 10 years, less than 10% managed to outperform.

However, a study in 2006 found that 74% of fund managers consider themselves above average.


Underestimating risk

For individual investors, however, the risks can be really meaningful. As a new paper about financial literacy in Saudi Arabia points out:

“Overconfidence in financial knowledge results in poor financial choices and ultimately leads to financial losses for individuals.”

The reality is that being too confident about our investment ability means that we underestimate the risks we might be taking. When we are sure that we are right, we don’t think enough about what might happen if we are wrong.

A clear recent example has been the crypto world, where a number of cryptocurrencies have imploded. Many people have lost a lot of money because the ‘investments’ they made into these tokens have turned out to be worthless.


Right place, right time

Unfortunately, overconfidence is highly prevalent in crypto. That is because it is so difficult to understand cryptocurrencies, what they do, and therefore why their prices go up or down.

The chances are that people who were just lucky to be in the right place at the time when everything was going up let themselves believe that they had been smart to invest. So, they took on more and more risk.

Unfortunately, getting caught up in the hype has now left many of them with huge losses. Since they were too confident in what they thought they knew, they underestimated the risks.

And what happened next is a good lesson for every investor to learn.


To discuss your long-term investment strategy, speak to a professional.

Please Register Below Or Login To Continue Reading.

Email
First Name
Last Name

2023

December 4 - Stock Markets Break Three-Month Losing Streak
December 3 - The Differences Between Life and Living Annuities
December 2 - Should you be an Optimist or a Pessimist With Your Money?
December 1 - How to Give Meaningful Gifts This Festive Season
November 4 - Market Update: The Effects of War, Higher Interest Rates and China on Equities
November 3 - Why do People Invest in Property?
November 2 - Retirement Planning: The ins and Outs of Nominating Beneficiaries
November 1 - Retiring Well is About More Than Money
October 4 - Why Your Marital Contract Really Matters
October 3 - How to Avoid Being Scammed by Email Fraudsters
October 2 - The Stock Market Indices to Watch When Monitoring Equity Performance
October 1 - Why do Some People Have a Problem Spending Money?
September 4 - The Difference Between Being Rich and Being Wealthy
September 3 - The Ins and Outs of Buying Offshore Property
September 2 - A Good Budget Doesn’t Limit Spending, it Prioritises it
September 1 - Should you pay off your home loan?
August 4 - How to Take Advantage of the Donations Tax Allowance
August 3 - Five Reasons why a Financial Windfall Must be Managed Carefully
August 2 - What’s Cooking with the Three-Pot System?
August 1 - Make Sure Your Family is Financially Prepared for When You Pass Away
July 4 - A Must-Have for Couples who Choose not to Tie the Knot
July 3 - Can Gratitude Make you Feel Better About Your Money?
July 2 - Four Ways to Make the Most of Retirement
July 1 - How to Invest When There’s So Much Bad News
June 4 - The Ins and Outs of Compulsory Annuities
June 3 - Who is Influencing Your Financial Decisions?
June 2 - R is for Rebalancing
June 1 - Don’t let Money Ruin Your Relationship
May 4 - Five Ways to Teach Kids About Money
May 3 - Much Ado About Risk
May 2 - Living Wills: A Must Have, Despite the Grey Areas
May 1 - What is True Wealth?
April 4 - How the 2023 Budget Will Impact Your Pocket
April 3 - Three Financial Imperatives for Women in Divorce
April 2 - Should You Ask ChatGPT for Financial Advice?
April 1 - Compound Interest: The Eighth Wonder of the World
March 4 - How a ‘Safe’ Fixed Deposit Might Still be Risky
March 3 - Thinking of moving to Australia? Bear these numbers in mind
March 2 - Avoid These 6 Barriers to Wealth Creation
March 1 - How Good do You Think You Are at Investing?
February 4 - Is Money Stress Taking a Toll on You?
February 3 - Why an Endowment is One of the Best Ways to Invest Offshore
February 2 - Why too Much of a Good Thing Can be a Bad Thing
February 1 - Invest With FIRE and Never Look Back
January 4 - Why Lottery Winners End up Broke: The Importance of Your Financial Context
January 3 - Discover the Freedom of a Tidy Portfolio
January 2 - Why You Absolutely Should be Investing in Education
January 1 - Four Simple Steps to Start the Year on the Right Financial Foot

2022

December 4 - What is This Volatility Risk People are Always Talking About?
December 3 - Why You Need to Watch Out for The Butterfly Effect
December 2 - 6 Ways to Achieve Financial Freedom
December 1 - Three Books for the Holidays
November 4 - The Question of Loyalty
November 3 - Why do we Even Have Bull and Bear Markets?
November 2 - Should I Buy a Holiday House?
November 1 - Put Stocks, Rather Than Socks, Under the Tree This Christmas
October 4 - Can You Take Out Life Insurance on Someone Else?
October 3 - Loss Aversion and Lifestyle Creep – How Behaviour Influences Saving
October 2 - Why Timing Might be Everything in Retirement – Especially in a Bear Market
October 1 - Get Rich - Stay Rich Eight Mistakes Wealthy People Never Make
September 4 - Capital Gains Tax: 10 Common Questions Answered
September 3 - The Risk That Many Investors Don’t Think About
September 2 - Much Ado About Regulation 28 and the Private Investor
September 1 - The “Two Bucket” Retirement Savings System: What is it and Why is it Important?
August 4 - Retirement Planning for Age-Gap Couples
August 3 - A Simple “50-15-5” Budget Hack for Women (and Men!)
August 2 - Does Your Family Need a Constitution?
August 1 - Women’s Month: Three Ways You Can Improve Your Money Health
July 4 - Five Things to Check When a Loved One Passes Away
July 3 - Rules of Financial Planning For a Special-Needs Child
July 2 - Why Your Financial Plan Should Cater For Possible Dementia
July 1 - Why Inflation is the Most Important Investment Benchmark
June 4 - How Relevant Is The 4% Rule of Thumb These Days?
June 3 - Why You Should Treat Your Finances Like Your Health
June 2 - Is Your Business Good Retirement Capital?
June 1 - With the Limits Raised, How Much Should You Invest Offshore?
May 5 - Quote of the Month: Challenging the Rejection of an Insurance Claim
May 4 - Financial Products: The Less You Understand, the More You Pay
May 3 - The Miracle of Investment Debit Orders
May 2 - Five Things to Think About as Interest Rates Rise
May 1 - Stay Calm When the Bear Prowls
April 5 - Quotes of the Month – The War in Ukraine
April 4 - Smart Ways to Give: During and After Your Lifetime
April 3 - Take These Three Steps to Break the Money Shame Spiral
April 2 - When Things Don’t Go According To (The Financial) Plan
April 1 - What Amazon and Ford Can Tell Us About Diversification
March 4 - Quotes of the month – What the NFT?
March 3 - How to Avoid Losing Your Life’s Savings to a “Tinder Swindler”
March 2 - The Different Ways to Invest: What Does It All Mean?
March 1 - Three Reasons You Shouldn’t Wait to Talk to Your Kids About Money
February 6 - Quote of the Month – Don’t Cash In Your Retirement Savings
February 5 - Should You Top Up Your Retirement Annuities Now?
February 4 - Don’t Let Delays in the Master’s Office Leave Your Family in Financial Distress
February 3 - Don’t Let Delays in the Master’s Office Leave Your Family in Financial Distress
February 2 - Three Reasons an Insurer Could Cancel Your Policy
February 1 - Investing: Men and Women See Things Differently
January 4 - Quote of the month – Stay invested!
January 3 - What SARS Says About Crypto Assets and Tax
January 2 - Three Ways to Leave a Legacy, And Not Just an Estate
January 1 - Red-Carding the Myth of The Rational Investor