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Page 1: Terrance Odean

Fear and Greed Drive the Stock Market

Terrance OdeanUniversity of California, Berkeley

SKAGEN Funds New Years’s Conference 2011

Page 2: Terrance Odean

• What do we know about investor behavior?

• Why does it matter?

– Market prices

– Investor welfare

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Investor Biases• Confusion about probability → Underdiversify.• Overconfidence → Trade too much.• Desire to reduce regret → Cling to losers.• Limited attention → Buy attention grabbing

stocks.• Confusion about probability → Chase

performance.

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Underdiversification

• Bill Gates vs.• Enron employees

– 62% of Enron employee 401(k) investments were in company stock

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Investor Biases• Confusion about probability → Underdiversify.• Overconfidence → Trade too much.• Desire to reduce regret → Cling to losers.• Limited attention → Buy attention grabbing stocks.• Confusion about probability → Chase performance.

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When All Traders Are Above Average(i.e., overconfident) Odean, 1998, Journal of Finance

• Trade more.

• Earn less.

• Underdiversify.

• Increase market volatility.

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Do Investors Trade Too Much?Odean, 1999, American Economic Review

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Excluding Non-Speculative Trades Odean, 1999, American Economic Review

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Monthly Turnover and Annual Performance of Individual Investors

0

5

10

15

20

25

1 (LowTurnover)

2 3 4 5 (HighTurnover)P

erce

nt A

nnua

l R

etur

n M

onth

ly T

urno

ver

Net Return Turnover

Trading is Hazardous to Your WealthBarber and Odean, 2000, Journal of Finance

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"Overall, men claim more ability than do women, but this difference emerges most strongly on … masculine task[s].”

Deaux and Ferris (1977)

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0

20

40

60

80

100

All Women All Men SingleWomen

Single Men

Boys will be BoysBarber and Odean, 2001, Quarterly Journal of Economics,

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-3

-2

-1

0

AllWomen

All Men SingleWomen

SingleMen

“Own Benchmark” Annual Net Returns Barber and Odean, 2001, Quarterly Journal of Economics

online

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Data = Expertise

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Learning to be Overconfident(Gervais & Odean, 2001, Review of Financial Studies)

• Self-attribution bias. People take too much credit for their own successes.

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Illusion of Control

• Who rolls the dice.

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Investor Biases• Confusion about probability → Underdiversify.• Overconfidence → Trade too much.• Desire to reduce regret → Cling to losers.• Limited attention → Buy attention grabbing stocks.• Confusion about probability → Chase performance.

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Panel A: Discount Households

0.0

1.0

2.0

jan feb mar april may june july aug sep oct nov dec

PGR

/PLR

Taxable TDAs

Rate at which Gains are Realized Relative to Losses

Source: Barber and Odean, 2003, Journal of Public Economics

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Disposition Effect in TaiwanBarber, Lee, Liu, Odean, 2007, European Financial Management

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0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

<-4

2

-36

-28

-20

-12 -4

4 12

20

28

36

44

52

60

Lik

elih

oo

d o

f r

ep

urch

as r

ela

tive t

o s

tocks s

old

fo

r lo

ss w

ith

zero

su

bseq

uen

t retu

rn

Percent return since sale

Relative Rate at which Investors Repurchase Stocks Previously Sold

Originally Sold for Gain

Orignially Sold for Loss

19Source: Barber, Odean, & Strahilevitz, 2010.

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Investor Biases• Confusion about probability → Underdiversify.• Overconfidence → Trade too much.• Desire to reduce regret → Cling to losers.• Limited attention → Buy attention grabbing

stocks.• Confusion about probability → Chase performance.

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All that Glitters: The Effect of Attention and News on the Buying Behavior of Individual

and Institutional InvestorsBarber and Odean, Review of Financial Studies, 2008

• Thousands of stocks.• Bounded rationality and processing ability.• Limit search to stocks that catch attention.• Investors buy stocks that catch their attention.

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Simulation Volume Sort

-40

-30

-20

-10

0

10

20

30

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10a 10b

Partitions Sorted on Same Period Trading Volume

Pe

rce

nt

Ord

er

Imb

ala

nc

e

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-40

0

40

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10a 10b

Partitions of Stocks Sorted on Current Day's Abnormal Trading Volume

Perc

ent O

rder

Imba

lanc

e .

Large Discount Brokerage

Large Retail Brokerage

Small Discount Brokerage

Abnormal Volume Sort IndividualsImbalance by # trades

Source: Barber & Odean 2008.

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Order Imbalance: Volume Sorts

TAQ & ISSM Data: 1983-2000

-20.00

-10.00

0.00

10.00

20.00

Lowest

Abnormal

Volume

Highest

Abnormal

Volume

Abnormal Trading Volume

Bu

y / S

ell

Imb

ala

nc

e

Individual Investors (Number of Trades)

Individual Investors (Value of Trades)

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Simulation Return Sort

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

1a 1b 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10a 10b

Partitions Sorted on Previous Period's Return

Pe

rc

en

t O

rd

er Im

ba

lan

ce

25

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-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

1a 1b 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10a 10b

Partitions of Stocks Sorted on Previous Day's Return

Perc

ent O

rder

Imba

lanc

e Large DiscountBrokerage

Small DiscountBrokerage

Large Retail Brokerage

Return Sort IndividualsImbalance by # trades

Source: Barber & Odean 2008.

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Order Imbalance: Return Sorts

TAQ & ISSM Data: 1983-2000

-4.00

0.00

4.00

8.00

12.00

Lowest

Day

Previous

Return

Highest

Day

Previous

Return

Previous Day's Return

Individual (Number of Trades)

Individual (Value of Trades)

27

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Investor Biases• Confusion about probability → Underdiversify.• Overconfidence → Trade too much.• Desire to reduce regret → Cling to losers.• Limited attention → Buy attention grabbing stocks.• Confusion about probability → Chase

performance.

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2 3 3 4 6 7 9 1015

39

05

1015202530354045

10 (W

orst) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

1 (Best

)

Performance Decile

Perc

enta

ge o

f Buy

sMutual Funds: Money Pours into

Last Year’s Winners

Source: Barber, Odean, and Zheng

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• What do we know about investor behavior?

• Why does it matter?

– Market prices

– Investor welfare

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Do Retail Trades Move Markets? Barber, Odean, & Zhu, Review of Financial Studies 2009

• Purchases and sales of individual investors are highly correlated

• Higher percentage of individual investor buy orders this week → more buy orders next week → higher returns next week → lower returns next month

• Higher percentage of individual investor buy orders this year → lower returns next year → in the subsequent year high idiosyncratic risk stocks bought by

individuals underperform those sold by 13 percentage points.

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Monthly Percentage Four-Factor Abnormal Returns for Value-Weighted Portfolios formed on the basis of Weekly Proportion Buyer-Initiated Trades using

Small and Large Trades: February 1983 to December 2000

Barber, Odean, Zhu, 2009, Review of Financial Studies

Monthly Four-Factor Alpha

(%) t-statistic

Panel A: Contemporaneous Returns Proportion

Buyer-Initiated Quintile

Small Trades

Large Trades

Small Trades

Large Trades

1 (Sold) -2.398 -7.398 -9.79 -38.96 2 -1.205 -5.718 -6.57 -29.36 3 -0.422 -1.091 -3.37 -11.73 4 0.413 4.111 4.20 31.91

5 (Bought) 1.786 8.062 10.92 35.87

B-S (5-1) 4.184 15.460 11.99 39.37

Panel B: Subsequent Returns Proportion

Buyer-Initiated Quintile

Small Trades

Large Trades

Small Trades

Large Trades

1 (Sold) -0.637 0.421 -5.16 3.57 2 -0.160 0.797 -1.87 8.06 3 0.161 0.276 1.70 3.53 4 0.427 -0.219 4.81 -2.79

5 (Bought) 0.733 -0.362 5.22 -3.96

B-S (5-1) 1.370 -0.782 6.55 -5.54

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Monthly Percentage Abnormal Returns for High Idiosyncratic Risk Stocks for Value-Weighted Portfolios formed on the basis of Annual Proportion Buyer-Initiated Trades

using Small Trades: 1984 to 2001

Barber, Odean, Zhu, 2009, Review of Financial Studies

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Just How Much Do Investors Lose from Trade?

Mean Daily ProfitsInstitutions

Millions $NTIndividuals

Million $NTGross Trading Profits

178.0 (178.0)

Gross Market-timing Profits

46.4 (46.4)

Commissions (25.6) (216.9)

Transaction Tax (27.0) (228.4)

Net Profits 171.8 (669.7)

Source: Barber, Lee, Liu, and Odean, Review of Financial Studies, 2009

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Economic Significance• Net Annual Individual Trading Losses are 2.2% of GDP.

• Individual Trading Losses Represent a 3.8% reduction in annual portfolio performance.

• Institutional Gains Represent a 1.5% increase in annual portfolio performance.

• 46.2 % of individuals’ gross daily losses are to foreign investors.– $3.5 million US per day

Source: Barber, Lee, Liu, and Odean, Review of Financial Studies, 2009

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U.S. vs. Taiwan

• Taiwanese investors trade more actively.

• U.S. investors face more asymmetric information risk.

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Do institutional investors have biases?

• Disposition effect • Extrapolating recent past?• Self-attribution bias• Overconfidence

– models– risk and leverage