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Bubble Emotions: Where are we with financial stocks?

BubblesThe behavior and emotions of investors during a price bubble can be extreme. Consider the cycle of investor emotions spurred by a bubble and shown in the figure. As prices increase, investors become excited and even thrilled. Investors attribute any profits to their own investment skill, and discount the possibility that luck or good fortune is adding to their investment gains. Some investors do not even come off the sidelines and enter the market until stories of easily-made profits begin making their rounds. Euphoria can set in when investors begin to believe that prices can't possibly decline. Detailed fundamental analysis goes out the window; many investors begin to purchase assets without even understanding what they are buying.

Emotion Cycle

Then, inexplicably, prices begin to fall. First, traders and investors feel nervous anxiety. You may hear, "I am not worried because I am a long-term investor; you don't lose money until you sell." Then there is the denial phase. Denial can be re-enforced in price bubbles that experience a bubble-echo (a second climb in price that is also called a ‘bear trap'). Prices begin to plummet to levels that once again reflect fundamental prospects. Fear becomes widespread. At this point, many previously successful investors have not only lost prior profits ("house money"), but begin to eat away at their initial investment capital. Desperation and panic set in followed by complete despair and capitulation. Investors are dumbfounded about how they could have been so wrong. Investors are so emotionally despondent that the idea of actually buying at bargain-basement levels is simply inconceivable. They wait until prices begin to rise and investor emotions begin to improve.

As depicted by the cycle of investor emotions, psychological influences can cause investors to "buy high" during the thrilling and euphoric stages of a bubble, and "sell low" at the panic and capitulation stages. Buying high and selling low is not a winning strategy. This is why Warren Buffet recommends that you be "fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful."

Where do you think we are in the financial stock bubble?

Comments

I think it is extrememly

I think it is extrememly difficult for the average Joe to have the time and resources to really understand when people are being greedy or fearful. Unfortunately, many people are already so busy with other aspects of their lives that they look for the time saving financial news. As many of us know, the news most often reflects the extremes in the bold, eye catching fonts. This leads many of us down the wrong investment path and possibly down a longer road to retirement.


FIN 527

This topic is extremely relevant during the current economic conditions. Everybody knows that in order to make money in the stock market, the underlying philosophy is "buy low, sell high." It seems that an investor who does not have the time to analyze and scrutinize a company's financial statements will be influenced newspaper headlines and will tend to purchase the "popular" stocks. The price of these stocks have already been pushed up, the more trendy/popular they become, the more demand. This will create a bubble and the stock will finally fall, causing people panic and "buy high, and sell low."

It is definitely easier said than done to "buy high, sell low." Warren Buffet doesn't follow trends and invests in what could possibly be considered "boring or untrendy" companies, but I am more than happy to model his investing techniques until someone else makes more money than him in the stock market.


Why?

Why would you buy when it was high? You would think that people would realize what is going to happen and then do something about it. I guess not. I will remember this when I start investing.


I agree with Warren Buffet's

I agree with Warren Buffet's comment of being fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful. Today, the stock market is unpredictable and dangerously close to a recession so making risky decisions such as Warren Buffet's could be beneficial in the long run.


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