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From the June 19, 2005 Break Out Report
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Made Butter: by Marco den Ouden "The investor's chief problem, and even his worst enemy, is likely to be himself." - Benjamin Graham Unscrupulous brokers are sometimes charged with betraying their clients with a practice known as churning. Simply put, it is when a broker who is given discretionary management of an account trades his client in and out of stocks excessively. The trades generate handsome commissions for the broker, but they often leave the portfolio flat. Either the trades made are poor or much of the profit (if there is any) is eaten up by commissions. Churning is generally considered to be an action that is abusive to the client, and sometimes it is actionable and results in law suits and even criminal charges. But studies have shown that the advent of online trading and the popularity of day trading has led to what might be called home-made churning. Terrance Odean and Brad Barber, two professors in the Graduate School of Management at the University of California at Davis published a study in 1999 showing that investors generally trade too much to the detriment of their portfolios and the ease of trading online has only exacerbated the problem. In Do Investors Trade Too Much? they analyzed trading records for 10,000 accounts at a large discount brokerage, almost 100,000 transactions altogether. They discovered that, on average, stocks purchased underperformed stocks sold to finance those purchases. In other words, the investor would have been better off holding on to his stock rather than trading into a different one. Looking further into the nature of this excessive trading, they discovered that investors tend to sell their winners and hold onto their losers. They use the proceeds of these sales to buy into the tail-end of a momentum stock then hang on for the ride down. (It's happened to me, so I know what they're talking about.) Even when eliminating trades that might be motivated by liquidity demands, tax loss selling, risk reduction or portfolio rebalancing, the results remain. Trading lowers returns. Odean and Barber also note that men tend to trade more often than women in their study Boys Will be Boys, and as a result, women outperform men with their portfolios. Men trade 45% more than women and earn annual risk-adjusted net returns that are 1.4% less annually. The difference is even more pronounced comparing single men and single women. Single men trade 67% more and earn 2.3% less than single women. The difference, they note, is not that women are better stock pickers but that they trade less often. In Trading is Hazardous to Your Wealth they studied the activities of over 65,000 households with accounts at a major brokerage between 1991 and 1996. They discovered that those who traded the most had an average annual return of 11.4% against an average return for all households of 16.4%. The market returned 17.9%. The average household turns over 75% of its common stock portfolio annually.
These guys are university profs, so their studies are long documents of 40 - 60 pages each. Their prose is generally readable, but sometimes abstruse, especially when they get into mathematical formulae. You can find these articles as readable short synopses and in their entirety at Terrance Odean’s page at the University of California . The lesson here, of course, is be careful and don't get cocky. Investing is not easy. And it's not a game or a sport, though some people treat it as if it is. You want to whip that cream into a frothy, sweet and tasty treat - a profitable portfolio. Churn it too much and you'll get butter! |
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