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Investor Psychology and Market Expectations

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Related: S&P 500

This is a sample of our Special Study Reports. In the future, if you wish to access this and other similar Research, You Can Register here - It's FREE!

Slide 1

A Guide to Help You and Your Clients Weigh the Risk vs. Reward in Today’s Market

Investors are facing the most difficult environment in decades. Although we know there is no ointment that can cure investors during this difficult period, we wanted to share our perspective on the current market.

 

 


 

Slide 2

Wisdom

 "The word 'crisis' in Chinese is composed of two characters: the first, the symbol of danger; the second, opportunity."
- Anonymous

 

 

 


 

  Slide 3

• The Stock Market has seen its share of turmoil this year.
• Since 1950, the S&P500 has had 152 days where the index was up or down by more than 3% (1% of 14,820 trading days).
• Since Sept. 2008, the S&P500 has had 32 days where the index was up or down by more than 3% (52.5% of 61 trading days).
• Out of the 32 days, 20 have been down <-3%, 12 have up >3%

 


 

   Slide 4

Value Investing

Value investors believe that markets over react to negative news…
• “Buy when there’s blood in the streets” - Baron Rothschild in 1871

•  Benjamin Graham and David Dodd in their classic book, Security Analysis, asserted that over reaction was the basis for a value investing style.

• “Most people get interested in stocks when everyone else is. The time to get interested is when no one else is. You can't buy what is popular and do well." Warren Buffet  

 

 


 

 Slide 5

Behavioral Finance

Prospect Theory: Investors value gains and losses differently (Kahneman and Tversky 1979)

Cognitive Bias (Winner Loser Effect): De Bondt and Thaler (1985) argued that investors overreact to both bad news and good news. Therefore, overreaction leads past losers to become underpriced and past winners to become overpriced." De Bondt and Thaler propose a strategy of buying recent losers and selling recent winners. Investors become too pessimistic about past losers and overly optimistic about past winners.

Representativeness Heuristic: Barberis, Shlieifer and Vishny (1998) argued that investors find patterns in data too readily, tend to over react to information and conservatism (clings to prior beliefs, under reacts to information). 

 

 


 

  Slide 6

 Then & Now


As of November 14th 2008
 

• The Median Company in the S&P500 has -2.5% Sales Growth Priced in for each of the next 5 years
• The Average Company in the S&P500 has -5.0% Sales Growth Priced in for each of the next 5 years
Assumes 5 Year Median EBITDA & Asset Turnover for each individual company in the S&P500 (monthly).

 

 

 


 

   Slide 7  

Because investors value gains and losses differently, markets tend to over react. This creates extraordinary opportunities!  

 

 


 

    Slide 8

Overlay: VE Analysis and Market Psychology

 

 

 


 

   Slide 9

Equity Mutual Fund Flow

 
Chart Source: Investment Company Institute (www.ici.org) and Trim Tabs (www.trimtabs.com)

“Don't try to buy at the bottom and sell at the top. It can't be done except by liars.”
—Bernard Baruch

 

 


 

  Slide 10

 Hedge Fund Selling Pressures

The tremendous growth in hedge funds over the past several years has made it more difficult for managers to earn high returns.

“The financial markets that we have constructed are now so complex, and the speed of transactions so fast, that apparently isolated actions and even minor events can have catastrophic consequences.
—Richard Bookstaber, A Demon of our own Design, Markets, Hedge Funds, and the Perils of Financial Innovation (Wiley 2007)

SEC Ban on Short Selling: 9/19/08 to 10/8/08 (14 days) caused more pressures on hedge fund selling because managers could not implement long/short positions like they could in past.

High Water Mark: The assurance that a fund only takes fees on profits unique to an individual investment: "If all they get is the management fee, why work?" observes Tom Taulli, an author and investment banker with Instream Partners in San Francisco. "What's the motivation?“

“Renowned New York hedge-fund honcho and political powerbroker Richard Perry is facing down his first losing year in hedge-fund investing since launching his fund some 20 years ago.” NY Post 10/16/08

 

 


 

 Slide 11

 Timing the Market is Hard
Market timing: Market timing is the practice of many investors to try to predict the best time to buy and sell stocks based on expected market direction. For example, an investment manager might switch a portion of his holdings from stocks into cash when he believes that the market has peaked.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If he times the market correctly, he could make a huge profit. Then, when he thinks the stock market is significantly undervalued, he could shift back into stocks in an effort to make another hefty gain. If such an investor was able to successfully time the market since 1950 till today and avoided the 20 worst performing months for the period, he would outperform an invested at all times strategy by 465 basis points annually. As shown in the chart below, the payoff on such a strategy is very significant.

On the other hand, timing the market incorrectly has significant negative consequences. An investor that missed the 20 best months over that period, underperformed by 335 basis points a year.

Market timing has many potential pitfalls and if you're trying to wait out current volatile conditions in order to maximize the value of your stock portfolio, you are taking on a huge risk for a strategy that is nearly impossible to accomplish consistently in the long term.

 

 

 


 

   Slide 12

 This Time is Different*
How The Last 3 Months Compare to the Worst 10 Months on Record in S&P500 since 1950

 

* Data was run as of Nov. 20th (which represents the low of the S&P500 in November 2008)
 Every Bull Market Starts with a Bear Market

 


 

  Slide 13

 CNBC Profits From Investors’ Anxiety, Fear, Greed, and Optimism

 

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNBC#cite_note-Hempel-30

There is a fairly clear long-term correlation between the performance of global stock markets and the audience ratings of CNBC. The network had a difficult time attracting viewers in the first half of the decade, but has seen viewership increase from a 2005 bottom to record highs in 2008, coinciding with the subprime mortgage crisis. CNBC continues to possess the wealthiest audience (in terms of average income) of any television channel in the United States. 1

Note 1 : Hempel, Jessi (31 March 2008). "CNBC Feels Your Pain...", Fortune. Retrieved on 31 March 2008.

 

 


 

    Slide 14

 What Other Investors are Saying….

Good Advice

“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. It's even better than the '70s. Certain common stocks are being given away. It is absolutely a time to plunge in. .”

– Marty Whitman, Third Avenue Management, October 14, 2008
S&P500 Index = 998

“Buy American. I am…A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful. And most certainly, fear is now widespread, gripping even seasoned investors.”

– Warren E. Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, October 16, 2008
S&P500 Index = 946

“It’s the single best time in my career that I’ve seen to invest. There is more value out there than you could ever imagine . The spread between price and value is the widest in many years, 30 or more years. Price are way below value.”

– Bill Ackman, Pershing Square Capital Management, November 13, 2008
S&P500 Index = 911 

 

 


 Slide 15

Japan Valuation Quintiles

(Percent to Target Current – Ranked by ALL)
Jan 1990 – March 2007

We believe that the Japanese Market (1990 – 2007) was the closest resemblance to the current US Credit Crisis. This table shows how valuation worked with the Japanese Large Caps (top 50% of Market Cap) from 1990 to 2007. Since 1990, an investor that indexed in Japan suffered negative returns. However, investors that used valuation were rewarded with an annualized return of 6.0%.

 

 

 


 

  Slide 16

Conclusion

• 2008 has been a very emotional year for investors. Emotions (and redemptions) have caused the markets to sell off to irrational levels. This has created a tremendous opportunity for long-term investors.

•Timing the market is a loser’s game and nearly impossible to achieve consistently.

•Even if we are not at a ‘bottom’, we know that investors will earn superior returns from current market levels.

•Our experience in Japan tells us that valuation works in ‘bad markets’.

 

 For further insights on investment opportunities, we recently calculated the implied sales growth rates (as seen on slide 5) for all the industrial/service firms in the S&P 500. Read our "Then and Now" study and download a list of stocks that may have been overly punished.
Click Here to Read and Download

 

Final Thought:

“Remember, my son, that any man who is a bear on the future of this country will go broke.”
–John Pierpont Morgan, December 10, 1908

 

Register with Value Expectations to Access Exclusive Market Reviews and Special Studies:

 

Market

Nice post about market situation.

Thanks
EMR

Thanks for point that as

Thanks for point that as well. This has really help me know more about investor psychology and market expectations none the less.

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I know that the correlation

I know that the correlation of download amelia returns is different between negative and positive states. Specifically, during negative states, the correlation is much much higher, which reduces the effects of diversification. download astro boy I wonder if herd behavior is different during negative and positive states as read more well?

Nice background on investor behavior

This is some pretty good information you have posted about investor psychology. The meltdown of so many banks had investors running for the sidelines, causing a massive erosion of wealth in a short time. While many investors took a bath and forced to turn to bad credit personal loans to cover their positions, the wise investors saw this as a buying opportunity. The markets have since recovered, bringing people back into the markets in droves. However, if mortgage rates take a turn for the worse, the markets will nosedive again - taking the unprepared for yet another ride downward. Of course, those in the know will see this coming and use it as an opportunity to turn another profit.

Herd mentality

The herd mentality is so true. We may be in for another big bear run next year if the economy doesn't pick up.
buying stocks for the first time | best stocks to buy right now

Investors psyche is deeply

Investors psyche is deeply related with market expectations and I learned many new points from your blog. Thanks for sharing the graphical explanation. Keep on doing.

Correlation in herd

I know that the correlation of returns is different between negative and positive states. Specifically, during negative states, the correlation is much much higher, which reduces the effects of diversification. I wonder if herd behavior is different during negative and positive states as well?

Stocks and risk

The stock market is a scary place to be sometimes and the last couple years have been rough.
how to buy stocks for beginners | Stock Market For Dummies

don't let the fear get you

don't let the fear get you though, a rally is in site so don't be caught with no holdings when it recovers

How To Buy Cheap Penny Stocks | Stock market for beginners

Great Post

Thanks for taking the time to write

Over the last year the market

Over the last year the market has had some wild up and down swings. It is the perfect example of why you do not want to sell when the market is headed down. If I had cashed out of stocks at the end of 2008 when the markets were getting crushed, I would have missed out on about a 35% return on my stocks and mutual funds this year. Stocks are similar to Real Estate. There should be a long term plan in place. I know when I am selling Franklin MA Real Estate I am constantly stressing to my buyer clients they should have a long term outlook. Of course if you know you will be transferred in a couple years it may make more sense to rent.

stock markets semm to be on a

stock markets semm to be on a bit of a bull rm at the minute will be interesting to see if it lasts for the rest of the year.

Slide 3 shows Key Factors that led to Economic Crisis

The slide 3 on status of 2008 stock market gives a quick overview of the key factors that led to the US economic meltdown. The financial failures of top American corporations like Bear Stearns, AIG and Lehman Brothers started this bubble. CEO greed, mortgage crisis and credit card crunch were the main contributors. - fort worth texas labor lawyer

The present recession

The present recession appears likely to be both long and deep, and thus, among recessions since 1950, most resemble that of 1973-74. In Slide 12, therefore, it is interesting to compare the sorry results of investing too early, in Nov 73, with the must better results of delaying investment until Sept 74. club penguin

Durable Goods & the Stock market

Thank you for sharing this blog! You'll notice that because of global economic recession, a lot of people are purchasing more durable goods than before. In the increasing unemployment rates and low income rates, proper investment is a must. Durable goods are items that do not wear out or expire in the short term, such as a car, a TV, or a refrigerator. (Durable goods respond to normal laws of supply and demand.) A payday loan would not, therefore be an example of a durable good – but it is a good service when needed. Stock markets, especially the Dow Jones, have been starting to hike back up after the Federal Reserve announced it would purchase an enormous raft (up to over $1 Trillion if necessary) in Treasury Securities. Since the financial system isn't trustworthy, it's no wonder more people are buying durable goods.