Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
Do investors love their losers more than their winners? In their January 2007 paper entitled "The Effect of Prior Beliefs and Preferences on Information Processing in an Investment Experiment", Jeremy Ko and Oliver Hansch use a stock picking simulation to measure the bias investors exhibit when processing new information about stocks they have selected. Each iteration of the simulation involves picking one of two similar stocks that will outperform during the coming week. Using results from simulations involving 99 total participants in 2003 and 2004, they conclude that:
In summary, investors appear to focus on underperforming/losing stocks, cut them more slack and put more money into them.
Investors/traders may want to adopt formal, even-handed rules for tracking news on their holdings.
For related research, see Blog Synthesis: Animal Spirits Round-up.