Be aware of absolute returns, because it’s a relative world

Is it possible for a human being to manage an absolute-returns fund? If you believe the latest behavioural finance research, it must be very difficult.


Greg Bright*

Money has an absolute value, or so we think. $10 is $10 is $10. But the prices for goods vary and it seems that the utility we get from the same $10 varies between different types of goods. And how we view the value of the alternatives is affected by what those alternatives are.

Professor Dan Ariely, in a study reported in a new book, Predictably Irrational, showed 100 MBA students three different options for subscribing to The Economist newspaper – options that actually appeared in a real advertisement – like this:

Website-only subscription: $59.00 per year

Sponsored Content

Print-only subscription: $125.00 per year

Print & web: $125.00 per year

There’s something strange going on here – why include two options, one for print-only and one for print and web at the same price? First let’s look at how many chose each of these options:

Website-only subscription: 16

Print-only subscription: 0

Print and web: 84

Unsurprisingly, the students preferred the print and web over the print-only. Most also went for the higher-priced option over the cheaper website-only option. But look what happened when Professor Ariely took out the middle print-only subscription option. So now they are choosing between website-only and print and web:

Website-only subscription: 68

Print and web: 32

What a difference that option makes to The Economist’s subscriptions.  Suddenly, most people are plumping for the cheap option rather than shelling out for the pricey print and web option. What’s going on?

Ariely explains that this shift is down to our preference for avoiding comparing things that are too dissimilar. In this experiment the easy option is comparing print with print-and-web. It’s obvious how much better print-and-web is than just print. Who would choose print-only for the same price? The website-only option gets ignored because it’s difficult to compare it with the other two options.

But, once the print-only option is removed, we’re stuck comparing dissimilar items, so then students go for the cheap option as suddenly this seems a safer choice.

All this is reported in a psychology newsletter called PsyBlog, which collates recent research on all aspects of human behaviour, including the link between investment or “money behaviour” and common practices.

The point of this, getting back to the original question, is that human beings make financial decisions in a relative framework, rather than an absolute one.

To manage money in a “benchmark-unaware” fashion, as pension funds look to do with at least parts of their portfolios, the managers have to get themselves into a completely unnatural frame of mind.

If everything is relative, as the saying goes, then one’s natural instinct has to be overridden in an absolute-return environment. The evidence is that absolutes are not easily come by.

*Greg Bright is the Beijing-based publisher of www. top1000funds.com



Leave a Comment

Sort content by

ESG seeks meaningful relationship with performance

Research on environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) and investments has advanced in rigour, coverage and volume, but data quality, and the problems of reverse causality are still concerns for academics looking for a meaningful relationship between ESG factors and investment performance.

How BlackRock’s Russ Koesterich sees the coming year

Emerging market equities in Asia and Latin America could be a bright spot in the lingering gloom hanging over global markets this year, according to BlackRock’s managing director of iShares Russ Koesterich.

Critical thinking in pension design and management

There is too much trend following and too little intellectual irritation in pension management, according to Keith Ambachtsheer, principal of KPA Advisory Services.

Preqin survey of private equity investors

The tide may be turning for private equity investments, with 73 per cent of investors planning to make new private equity commitments in 2012, according to a global survey of 100 institutional investors by Preqin.

Outliers outdo averages in hedge funds

Hedge fund investors should focus on a few exceptional managers and keep allocations to just 1 or 2 per cent of a diversified portfolio, according to the former head of JP Morgan’s hedge fund seeding operations, Simon Lack.

Study casts doubt on liquidity of UK market

A study into the workings of the UK stock market has found that its liquidity is reduced by high-frequency trading, raising concerns that Europe’s biggest equity market is not as deep as once thought.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous