Would You Pay Over $200 For A $20 Bill? Don’t Be Too Sure
InvestorEducation / Trader Psychology Sep 24, 2009 - 11:01 PM GMTI just read a very interesting book. It is called “Sway”: The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior.
Max Brazerman is a professor at The Harvard Business School and introduces his new students to a game at the beginning of the semester. He auctions off a $20 bill with only two rules to the game.
1- The students must bid in increments of $1 and
2- The winner wins the bill but the runner-up forfeits his bid.
So the bidding begins and builds rapidly. However, without realizing, the two students with the highest bids inevitably get locked into a battle for the $20 bill. Somehow the mind-set goes from playing to win to playing not to lose.
“Students are pulled by both the momentum of the auction and the looming loss if they back down- a loss that is growing greater by the bid. The two forces, in turn, feed off each other: commitment to a chosen path inspires additional bids, driving the price up, making the potential loss loom even larger” say the authors Ori and Rom Brafman.
They go on to explain that there are three elements to the auction. The first is the optimistic stage ….the easy lure of the free lunch. This gives away to the second stage where the front runners now realize they could be in trouble. It is here where the loss aversion meets commitment. The final stage of course is digging deeper and deeper unwilling to let go.
I found it very interesting that our natural response is irrational. It seems the deeper we get in the more we dig. This loss aversion also seems to be amplified when it meets commitment and is a powerful force in our decision making. We have all been faced with the manageable loss in trading and should act rationally to control that loss while it is still small. However, when we don’t realize we are being swayed and we are focused on avoiding the loss….. our commitment to stay with it gets stronger. That is when small becomes large and even catastrophic.
We can guard against this to a certain degree by determining our loss before we play and always check our commitment at the door.
Incidentally, if you are wondering just how much these Harvard MBA’s paid for the $20 bill……….the record level was $204…..so far.
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Charles Maley
www.viewpointsofacommoditytrader.com
Charles has been in the financial arena since 1980. Charles is a Partner of Angus Jackson Partners, Inc. where he is currently building a track record trading the concepts that has taken thirty years to learn. He uses multiple trading systems to trade over 65 markets with multiple risk management strategies. More importantly he manages the programs in the “Real World”, adjusting for the surprises of inevitable change and random events. Charles keeps a Blog on the concepts, observations, and intuitions that can help all traders become better traders.
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