On the Trend Recognition and Forecasting Ability of Professional Traders

Empirical research documents that temporary trends in stock price movements exist, so that riding a trend can be a profitable investment strategy. In this paper, we provide a thorough test of the trend recognition and forecasting ability of financial professionals who work in the trading room of a large bank, as well as those of novices (students). In an experimental study using a within-subject design, we analyze two ways of trend prediction that have analogues in the real world: probability estimates and confidence intervals (quantile estimates). We find that, depending on the type of task, either underconfidence (in probability estimates) or overconfidence (in confidence intervals) can be observed in the same trend prediction setting based on the same information. Furthermore, we find that the degree of overconfidence in both tasks is significantly positively correlated for all experimental subjects. These findings not only contribute to the literature on judgmental forecasting, but also have important implications for financial modeling. This paper demonstrates that a theorist has to be careful when deriving assumptions about the behavior of agents in financial markets from psychological findings.

[1]  Derek J. Koehler,et al.  Heuristics and Biases: The Calibration of Expert Judgment: Heuristics and Biases Beyond the Laboratory , 2002 .

[2]  Patric Andersson,et al.  Predicting the World Cup 2002 in soccer: Performance and confidence of experts and non-experts☆ , 2005 .

[3]  K. Stanovich,et al.  Individual differences in reasoning: Implications for the rationality debate? , 2000, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[4]  L’SA,et al.  The impact of institutional trading on stock prices * , 2001 .

[5]  Ning Zhu,et al.  Up Close and Personal: Investor Sophistication and the Disposition Effect , 2006, Manag. Sci..

[6]  F. Albert Wang Strategic trading, asymmetric information and heterogeneous prior beliefs , 1998 .

[7]  Kent D. Daniel,et al.  Investor Psychology in Capital Markets: Evidence and Policy Implications , 2001 .

[8]  Magnus Johannesson,et al.  Confidence interval estimation tasks and the economics of overconfidence , 2003 .

[9]  A. Kyle Continuous Auctions and Insider Trading , 1985 .

[10]  Carl Martin Allwood,et al.  Stability and variability in the realism of confidence judgments over time, content domain, and gender , 2003 .

[11]  John R. Nofsinger,et al.  Herding and Feedback Trading by Institutional and Individual Investors , 1999 .

[12]  Patterns of Behavior of Professionally Managed and Independent Investors , 2001 .

[13]  Werner F. M. De Bondt,et al.  Betting on trends: Intuitive forecasts of financial risk and return , 1993 .

[14]  Martin Hellwig,et al.  On the aggregation of information in competitive markets , 1980 .

[15]  Terrance Odean,et al.  Volume, Volatility, Price, and Profit When All Traders are Above Average , 1998 .

[16]  Victor L. Bernard,et al.  POST-EARNINGS-ANNOUNCEMENT DRIFT - DELAYED PRICE RESPONSE OR RISK PREMIUM , 1989 .

[17]  Ning Du,et al.  Coherence and Consistency of Investors' Probability Judgments , 2007, Manag. Sci..

[18]  Narasimhan Jegadeesh,et al.  Returns to Buying Winners and Selling Losers: Implications for Stock Market Efficiency , 1993 .

[19]  Robert E. Verrecchia,et al.  Information aggregation in a noisy rational expectations economy , 1981 .

[20]  Andrew M. Parker,et al.  Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com) DOI: 10.1002/bdm.481 Decision-making Competence: External Validation through an Individual-differences Approach , 2005 .

[21]  P. Juslin,et al.  Format dependence in subjective probability calibration , 1999 .

[22]  Ser-Huang Poon,et al.  Practical Issues in Forecasting Volatility , 2005 .

[23]  Albert S. Kyle,et al.  Speculation Duopoly with Agreement to Disagree: Can Overconfidence Survive the Market Test? , 1997 .

[24]  Jack B. Soll,et al.  Overconfidence: It Depends on How, What, and Whom You Ask. , 1999, Organizational behavior and human decision processes.

[25]  Baruch Fischhoff,et al.  Calibration of Probabilities: The State of the Art , 1977 .

[26]  R. Litzenberger,et al.  QUARTERLY EARNINGS REPORTS AND INTERMEDIATE STOCK PRICE TRENDS , 1970 .

[27]  F. Albert Wang,et al.  Overconfidence, Investor Sentiment, and Evolution , 2000 .

[28]  Guo Ying Luo,et al.  On the Survival of Overconfident Traders in a Competitive Securities Market , 2001 .

[29]  J. Potters,et al.  An experiment on risk taking and evaluation periods , 1997 .

[30]  J. Sákovics,et al.  Speculating against an overconfident market , 2003 .

[31]  N. Barberis,et al.  A Model of Investor Sentiment , 1997 .

[32]  P. Juslin,et al.  Naive empiricism and dogmatism in confidence research: a critical examination of the hard-easy effect. , 2000, Psychological review.

[33]  G. Gigerenzer,et al.  Probabilistic mental models: a Brunswikian theory of confidence. , 1991, Psychological review.

[34]  Rakesh K. Sarin,et al.  Effects of ambiguity in market experiments , 1993 .

[35]  Magne Jørgensen,et al.  Better sure than safe? Over-confidence in judgement based software development effort prediction intervals , 2004, J. Syst. Softw..

[36]  A. H. Murphy,et al.  Probability Forecasting in Meteorology , 1984 .

[37]  L. Summers,et al.  The Noise Trader Approach to Finance , 1990 .

[38]  D. Hilton The Psychology of Financial Decision-Making: Applications to Trading, Dealing, and Investment Analysis , 2001 .

[39]  Cade Massey,et al.  Detecting Regime Shifts: The Causes of Under- and Over-Reaction , 2004, Manag. Sci..

[40]  Mark S. Seasholes,et al.  Do Investor Sophistication and Trading Experience Eliminate Behavioral Biases in Financial Markets , 2005 .

[41]  G. Keren Calibration and probability judgements: Conceptual and methodological issues , 1991 .

[42]  Jeffrey Hales,et al.  Predicting the Next Step of a Random Walk: Experimental Evidence of Regime-Shifting Beliefs , 2001 .

[43]  I. Erev,et al.  Simultaneous Over- and Underconfidence: The Role of Error in Judgment Processes. , 1994 .

[44]  A. H. Murphy,et al.  Experiments in the laboratory and the real world , 1973 .

[45]  Kent D. Daniel,et al.  Overconfidence, Arbitrage, and Equilibrium Asset Pricing , 2001 .

[46]  P. Goodwin,et al.  Judgmental forecasting: A review of progress over the last 25 years , 2006 .

[47]  C. Betsch,et al.  Explaining heterogeneity in utility functions by individual differences in decision modes , 2006 .

[48]  A. Tversky,et al.  The weighing of evidence and the determinants of confidence , 1992, Cognitive Psychology.

[49]  A. H. Murphy,et al.  A comparative evaluation of objective and subjective weather forecasts in the united states , 1984 .

[50]  Thomas Langer,et al.  Framing Effects in Stock Market Forecasts: The Difference Between Asking for Prices and Asking for Returns , 2007 .

[51]  Keith E. Stanovich,et al.  Individual differences in rational thought. , 1998 .

[52]  Martin Weber,et al.  Momentum and Turnover: Evidence from the German Stock Market , 2002 .

[53]  P. Juslin The Overconfidence Phenomenon as a Consequence of Informal Experimenter-Guided Selection of Almanac Items , 1994 .

[54]  Alexandros Benos,et al.  Aggressiveness and survival of overconfident traders , 1998 .

[55]  T. Wallsten,et al.  Individual Decision Behavior , 1972 .

[56]  Jennifer Conrad,et al.  Profitability of Momentum Strategies: An Evaluation of Alternative Explanations , 2001 .

[57]  Peter R. Locke,et al.  Professional trader discipline and trade disposition , 2005 .

[58]  Sanford J. Grossman On the Impossibility of Informationally Efficient Markets , 1980 .

[59]  Joshua Klayman,et al.  Overconfidence in interval estimates. , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[60]  Susan M. Mangiero International Momentum Strategies , 1998 .

[61]  D. Hirshleifer Investor Psychology and Asset Pricing , 2001 .

[62]  Paul Slovic,et al.  Comparison of Bayesian and Regression Approaches to the Study of Information Processing in Judgment. , 1971 .

[63]  Anders Winman,et al.  The naïve intuitive statistician: a naïve sampling model of intuitive confidence intervals. , 2007, Psychological review.

[64]  R. Shiller Bubbles, Human Judgment, and Expert Opinion , 2001 .

[65]  Martin Weber,et al.  September 11 and Stock Return Expectations of Individual Investors , 2005 .

[66]  B. Fischhoff,et al.  Calibration of probabilities: the state of the art to 1980 , 1982 .

[67]  E. Fama The Behavior of Stock-Market Prices , 1965 .

[68]  Terrance Odean,et al.  Learning to Be Overconfident , 1997 .

[69]  Markus Glaser,et al.  Overconfidence and trading volume , 2003 .

[70]  John A. List,et al.  Do professional traders exhibit myopic loss aversion? An experimental analysis , 2005 .

[71]  Paul A. Gompers,et al.  Institutional Investors and Equity Prices , 1998 .

[72]  Stephen E. Wilcox Investor Psychology and Security Market Under- and Overreactions , 1999 .

[73]  Albert S. Kyle,et al.  Informed Speculation with Imperfect Competition , 1989 .