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                                       Details for article 6 of 7 found articles
 
 
  Searching for Rational Investors in a Perfect Storm: A Behavioral Perspective
 
 
Title: Searching for Rational Investors in a Perfect Storm: A Behavioral Perspective
Author: Lowenstein, Louis
Appeared in: Journal of behavioral finance
Paging: Volume 7 (2006) nr. 2 pages 66-74
Year: 2006-06-01
Contents: In October, 1991, there occurred off the coast of Massachusetts a "perfect storm," a tempest created by a rare coincidence of events. In the late '90s, there was another perfect storm, an also rare coincidence of forces which caused huge waves in our financial markets, as the NASDAQ index soared, collapsed, and bounced part way back. What had happened to the so-called "rational" investors, the smart money, whom economists have for decades said, would keep market prices in close touch with the underlying values? Despite the hundreds of papers on markets and their efficiency, it is a remarkable fact that no scholar, not one, has looked to see who are these rational, i.e., value, investors, how they operate, and with what results. I decided to see how a group of ten value funds, selected by a knowledgeable manager, performed in the turbulent boom-crash-rebound years of 1999-2003. Did they suffer the permanent loss of capital of so many who invested in the telecom, media and tech stocks? Did they, too, get caught up in the momentum-chasing frenzy of the day? For most managers, mimicking the index, it was difficult not to own Enron, Oracle and the like, but these ten value funds had stayed far away. Looking closer, these ten managers have a quite distinct profile, inner-directed, confident of their investment philosophy and content to swim against the crowd. They owned highly selective portfolios, mostly 34 stocks or less, vs. the 160 in the average equity fund. Reflecting their consistent and disciplined approach, they turned their portfolios at one-sixth the rate of the average fund. Bottom line: every one of the ten outperformed the index over the five year period, and as a group they did so by an average of 11% per year, the financial equivalent of back-to-back no-hitters. The article closes with a brief discussion of the distinctive temperament and attributes of this rare group of fund managers. As for those efficient market models, let the chips fall where they will.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 6 of 7 found articles
 
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 Koninklijke Bibliotheek - National Library of the Netherlands