A few years back, the Powerball jackpot surpassed $1.5 billion, and a lottery frenzy ensued.
That’s when financial website Business Insider decided to run an experiment. A reporter stood by a lottery stand and offered to buy people’s freshly purchased tickets for up to double their face value.
Most folks clung to their tickets as if they had already won.
This makes no sense. We all know that those tickets would likely be worthless after the lottery drawing. Even before the drawing, when those tickets have some (infinitesimal) chance of paying off… if someone offers you double the price, you should take it.
If nothing else, you could go buy twice as many lottery tickets. (That would up your chances from one in 292 million to one in 146 million… How could you lose?)
The point is – folks make weird decisions. Our animal brains can fool us. This example is a little frivolous, but we often make real, costly mistakes worth hundreds of thousands of dollars when investing or planning our retirement strategies.
Today, I want to share a simple trick to getting around a common emotional roadblock…
Humans are prone to an emotional bias called the “endowment effect.” This phenomenon, also known as “divestiture aversion,” occurs when we place a higher value on something simply because we own it.
Richard Thaler, a pioneer in behavioral economics who won a Nobel Prize for his work, loved to show this concept with coffee mugs.
He’d offer to sell folks a generic coffee mug with a university logo on it, and the median price people were willing to pay was somewhere around $2.50. However, if he gave the mugs out for free and then tried to buy them back from people, the median price they would demand was about $5.25.
Once it becomes “your” mug, it becomes a lot more valuable to you. We demand unreasonably high prices to give away the things we own.
Investors do this all the time…
Think of it this way… Let’s say you own shares of Stock A because you used to work there and received shares as a part of your annual bonus.
But your current portfolio consists of a mix of stocks that either pay a high dividend or have substantial growth potential.
Stock A fits neither of those requirements. It hasn’t paid a dividend in seven years, and its revenues are down 30% since 2012. Plus, it has accumulated a mountain of debt.
But there are folks out there who would hold too much of Stock A… simply because they value it more than a reasonable buyer would. They’ve created a strange link between their identities and that stock.
One explanation for why humans do this is that the endowment effect increases our bargaining power when trading in small groups, giving us an evolutionary advantage. Therefore, we’ve all descended from ancestors with the endowment effect built into their brains.
Whatever the reason, it doesn’t help us today. We’ve all got a drawer full of junk that’s worth $2.50 at most – just like that coffee mug.
Let’s purge the mugs from our portfolios.
A simple test can help you change your perspective and shake off the endowment effect: From our example above, let’s say you own $5,000 of Stock A. What if, overnight, that $5,000 in stock turned into $5,000 cash?
You now have the choice to either repurchase shares of Stock A for the exact same price, or use that $5,000 to invest in another stock.
Almost everyone would choose to invest that $5,000 elsewhere. Let’s face it – the S&P 500 Index includes probably 400 stocks you’d rather own than this kind of dud.
Nothing happened to Stock A overnight to change your mind… The only thing that changed is your possessions.
The next time you sit down to evaluate your portfolio, or anything you own for that matter, think about this…
Mentally clear out your portfolio. Imagine selling everything and going to cash. Then, review every investment as if you were deciding to buy it again.
That’s the way the market works, really. Everything you hold today, you essentially decide to “buy” anew each and every day.
If you want to set your portfolio up for success, you’ll do better to act that way.
Here’s to our health, wealth, and a great retirement,
Dr. David Eifrig
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Source: Daily Wealth