Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
Are "intuitive statistics" good enough for investing? In their brief March 2007 paper entitled "We Don’t Quite Know What We Are Talking About When We Talk About Volatility", Daniel Goldstein and Nassim Taleb report the results of a simple test of the ability of portfolio managers, traders, quantitative analysts and financial engineering graduate students to distinguish between two widely used measures of volatility: mean absolute deviation and standard deviation. Based on responses from 87 individuals to a survey question giving the mean absolute deviation for a normal distribution of stock returns and asking for the standard deviation, they find that:
In summary, sloppiness in applying statistics can lead to severe misestimates of variability. People should rely on definitions, not intuitions, in assessing volatility.
For related research, see Blog Synthesis: Volatility Effects. See also our blog entry of 9/26/05 for key conclusions from Nassim Taleb's book entitled Fooled by Randomness.