Appendix

Bernd Krampen (Norddeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale, Germany)

Using Economic Indicators in Analysing Financial Markets

ISBN: 978-1-80455-325-1, eISBN: 978-1-80455-324-4

Publication date: 27 January 2023

Citation

Krampen, B. (2023), "Appendix", Using Economic Indicators in Analysing Financial Markets, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 229-230. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-324-420231022

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Bernd Krampen. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


Summary of Tips and Tricks in Behavioural Finance.


Information P erception
Don't just record news that suits you. Look for other opinions. Exchange with others – dissenters
Selective perception
First impressions can be deceptive
Primacy effect
Don't just take in the flashy, easily accessible messages. Realise that most of the easily accessible messages are already included in the courses
Availability heuristic, contrast effect
You often record messages according to your state of mind. Decouple that a little
Availability heuristic, affective congruence
Be careful not to permanently see your region (share) more positively than other regions (shares)
Home bias
Information processing
Note that sunk costs must not cause a decision once made to continue to run
Mental accounting, sunk costs
Be aware that for a more beautiful cognitive presentation, profits are often considered individually, but losses are summarised
Hedonic framing
Making decisions
Be aware that anchoring (first value, past value, rumours, ...) can lead to later decision problems
Anchoring
Even if an observation fits well into the scheme, it does not have to be so
Schematics
The joint probability of two events can never be greater than the probability of each individual event
Conjunction fallacy
Do not hold on to your forecast for far too long, believing that things will eventually happen as expected. After all, what has gone up can go up even more, what has gone down can go down even more
Gambler's fallacy
Only because a region (company) belongs to a special class (sector) it does not necessarily mean it will behave the same way as the other.
Spurious correlation
Simply because in October happened to happen a lot of crashes does not necessarily mean, that the crash will happen in this October again (with the same probability)
Conditional probability fallacy

Source: Own illustration.

(Continued)

Prospect theory
Be aware that you make decisions dependent on the choice of a reference point. Thereby (additional) profits are valued differently than (additional) losses. It is best to forget the cost price and decide right at the moment on the basis of the information again and again
Reflection effect
People adjust ‘correct’ forecasts (too) quickly, whereas they hold on to ‘incorrect’ forecasts for too long
Disposition effect
Absolute security (100%) seems to be very important – much more than just under 99% security. Accordingly, much more value is attached to it (than it actually is).
Certainty effect
Control illusion
In order to feign control, people tend to say that they knew it. But this does not reflect on how the relationships actually are
Hindsight bias
Forecast bands are often much too narrow
Control illusion
In order to feign control, it seems to be better not to act at all. By this heuristic, however, a loss (false forecast) is allowed to run for too long
Status-quo bias
Do not attribute gains to yourself and losses to others as a matter of principle
Attribution fallacy
Avoidance of dissonance
Your commitment plays an important role: the higher the more problems may arise.
Therefore, when making decisions (investments, forecasts), always think about how much you are responsible, how much you deviate from the norm, how much you identify with your decision, how much other know and how much irreversible costs (wrong course) have already been incurred. Try to keep everything as low as possible!
Formations of parties
Find out which market themes are currently being played out, which are priced in, which are taking a back seat and which will become more important in the future. In order to stay on a par with the market, one must predict the numbers of ‘the day after tomorrow’. To do this, you have to consider operational developments of ‘tomorrow’ by analysing the change in the structural factors of ‘today’. The letter part of the analysis is the most crucial one
And in summary:
Know yourself (with your habits and mistakes), constantly observe and correct yourself in your behaviour and anticipate the mistakes of others!

Source: Own illustration.