Think Twice: Harnessing the Power of Counterintuition
A**R
Utterly Sensible, but stops short of its promise...
I am not going to delve in too much detail about the contents of the book, other reviewers have done a very good job of that. Instead, I am interested in understanding a few things in greater detail; sort of pose the questions to the author if I could. Indeed, the book raises many interesting points.The author has picked up many cognitive biases and woven a nice little story around them. To make the 'package' more attractive, he has also thrown in the tagline of the book being for 'investors', the implicit assertion being that we can make more money if we could eliminate some of the biases (as if we are already making millions in markets and could suddenly make billions!). I found nothing useful here for traders or investors (full disclaimer: I did not buy the book for that purpose, my sole interest was cognitive bias only). If you can separate the marketing hype and take out the 'trader/investor' framework, it is a mediocre book on cognitive biases at best, simply because it does not cover all of them, or even the most important ones. If you want some hard hitting stuff on biases, you are better off reading Kahneman, Tversky, et. al., directly. This book is a nice filler if heavy and comprehensive tomes are not your thing (though Kahneman happens to be very readable).Ok, with the disclaimer done, some questions and possibilities.1. There are too many implicit statements in the book, with the author neither making open statements, nor taking them to their logical conclusion. For instance, the episodes related to portfolio managers doing worse than the market are mentioned numerous times. Each time, it is implicitly stated that the investors would well to invest in index funds rather than go with portfolio managers. Hmmm...One of the major themes on crowdsourcing posits that markets run up and become ripe for crashes as diversity gets eliminated from the market and all agents start conforming to the dominant view of the market. That issue has been known in the financial literature in many forms for decades. It is the reason behind once successful trading strategies becoming useless in addition to causing market cycles (in fact, the famed Eugene Fama paper on Efficient Market Hypothesis hinges on this very feature, you cannot have a lasting advantage or a trading strategy in the market). The "Index Fund Strategy" also has to be viewed in this light. After all, Index Funds do not invest in 10,000 assets. Most leading indices comprise of 30, 40, 50 or 100 stocks or securities at best. If everyone starts to follow and invest in these indices only, diversity would get knocked out of this decision. And very rapidly too. Logically, stock pickers who were investing outside the indices would do better than indices. All of a sudden, index funds will start looking bad and money managers will start looking good, for some time...So am not so sure what the blinding insight here is. That investors should start investing in index funds? That would start a different cycle, at least some money managers will start outperforming indices significantly. Go with the money managers, index funds will get better. It is a forever oscillating system.More than that, different chapters conflate a lot of concepts. For example, a baseball team owner venting on the team because it loses 8 out of its first 12 games... The author argues that the owner was wrong because there WAS real skill involved. Why wouldn't the same thing apply to the big pension funds firing their money managers because they had a bad year or quarter? Simply pointing out that the fired folks suddenly outperformed the ones who replaced them proves neither mean reversion nor lack of skill.This conflation continues throughout the book, though I am not complaining about it. In fact, I quite enjoyed it because it put the same conflicting positions in juxtaposition as the incident of 'global oil supply debate' that the author has listed in the book.2. Again, the idea of crowdsourcing has 'second order effect' questions that the book neither raises nor answers. We are seeing a situation where the crowd is better than experts, for the time being. I have no problem with computer based predictive systems being better than the experts. But there is a bit of a problem with overall crowdsourcing paradigm.First and foremost, all the successful predictive market and crowd wisdom experiments have needed to be well controlled and well set up. You suddenly don't go asking people on the street what the price of crude oil six months later will be. As listed by the author, people need to have right kind of incentives, they need to know about the subject well enough and so on. Question: if crowdsourcing is so effective, why is a survey of 50 or 100 economists about economic indicators usually wrong and typically wide off the mark? If expertise is such a hindrance, then what level of familiarity with the subject is the right level for getting crowdsourcing right?Next order question, of course, is the same as what tanked the likes of LTCM. If experts also typically end up creating crude mental models while predicting (simple extrapolation), wouldn't the same thing apply to all the participants? May be in a stable system (the world where LTCM's models predicted everything accurately, till the normal distributions worked), the crowd would be right. What about fundamental shifts in the market (what caused LTCM to fail and other such major turning points in financial history)? Will the crowds be able to effectively pick those? Not so sure again, as we simply don't have enough evidence. And I am not even touching upon the diversity issue here.3. At some point, the author makes a really tired point about 'the market being more accurate than the individual trader or investor'. If you are a seasoned trader or investor, I am sure you would probably get a bemused chuckle at best. If individual biases do not add up, then why do we have bubbles at all? I know he has conveniently laid the blame at the door of market losing diversity. But if all or most of the participants in the collective are the same, just change their opinion (as it often happens in bubbles), at what point do you say the market has lost diversity? The collective argument simply means that the trend following systems of the '80s and the madness of the last decade were actually legitimate. The collective consciousness of the market WAS driving everything up after all. And that too for multiple years.4. I think the financial crisis has been just a favorite horse to flog for too many writers. No harm in analyzing it one more time and earning some quick bucks. But for every Taleb who made money in the crisis, there are many who bet against the 'madness' in 2003, 2004 or 2005, and lived to the rue the day. And there have been plenty, just that those with the staying power eventually triumphed. There have been cassandras at all times, just that the crisis happened and the cassandras of the day (Roubini, et. al.) collected the accolades.5. Laying all the blame for the last financial crisis at the doorstep of 'bad modelling' or 'cognitive biases' alone is probably too narrow a view anyway. Probably the biggest factor was the incentive built into the system. Unprecedented amount of liquidity pumped into the system without any apparent reason (why did Greenspan keep pumping money even when the global economy was on the boil is a question no one has an answer to), no financial oversight, individual incentives adding up to collective disaster (the author is right about this); these are probably bigger reasons for it than anything else. If your model is right and you are predicting disaster, but listening to you would force the corporation to forgo billions in profit for next few years and its bosses to lose millions in bonuses; there is only one logical outcome possible, you get fired. If you are lucky enough to be able to raise money and bet against the system, you may have the last laugh. Otherwise, you don't stand a chance. I don't think cognitive bias has a lot to do with it.6. Coming back to the investor / trader premise, what about automated systems? Much of the trading on the exchanges today is carried out by automated systems. Occasional glitches do bring the problems to the surface. But how do you trade / invest in markets that pit sophisticated algorithms and computers against you? Market information may also be getting less transparent with dark pools, etc., emerging in a big way. How do these affect the collective wisdom of the market? If half the participants in the market are computers and algorithms, what shape would investor biases take then? Will the market stop having bubbles (since the computers will beat the biased humans in a big way, all of us humans will go bankrupt and there will be no bubble)? Again, I am not holding the author to it, as the book is not really addressing investing in any serious manner.Okay, with the questions over, now let us turn to why I think this book is worth four stars. One, it is a thoroughly enjoyable book with exhaustive research, a great bibliography and good anecdotes interspersed. Two, the book may not delve too deep in the topics, but at least asks the right questions. If you stay with the thoughts and are willing to push the questioning further on your own, the book gives you enough material for doing that too. Three, there are some things that you can use in day to day decision making. Ideas like the collective, etc., are difficult to deploy without going through elaborate processes and large scale organizational buy-in. But the checklists at the end of the chapters are handy in case of some of the biases. Finally, the book is a nice and light read. I would prefer it any day over a fiction book for its sheer reading pleasure.Overall, worth a read. Just don't expect it will help you make 'more money', and be happy with some research being quite dated.Cheers.
A**A
Think Well or Rush to Risk
In his new book Michael Mauboussin aims to give investors and business people a clear exposé of how our brains can trick us. He offers delightful ways to recognize the blind allies we often stumble into. It is clearly just not easy to recognize, much less overcome, our natural tendencies to rush to judgment. Acknowledging this challenge, the central question is how long will it take for any of us to become more at ease Thinking Twice?We all get in the habit of understanding decision making from our own perspective. I am Michael Mauboussin's fan and his mother-in-law so take what I say as you will. I have also spent the 34 years of my professional life working as a family therapist and in so doing have learned about the challenges of thinking rationally.Most of us know that stress contributes to poor decision-making. Of course if the people you love die, or if you get divorced, you might not be at the top of your rational game. But now we know that it is just not stress or mental illness that creates the conditions for poor decision-making, it's the way the brain has evolved plus the signals from the environment which pressure us to make fast decisions. Now, by pausing to Think Twice, it becomes possible for us to avoid many irrational "slippery slopes" or the thin ice that we simply couldn't see before we stopped to think twice.Mauboussin sweeps away worries about being neurotic or stressed-out as the only cause of poor decision-making, and notes that learning to be rational is a challenge for us individually and as a society.We do not value introspection, flexibility or the ability to properly calculate evidence sufficiently to test for these rational abilities in standard IQ tests. The pressure is on for individuals to understand the brain's vulnerabilities and to see our mistakes without negative judgment.It requires less energy for the brain to reduce the number of alternatives, or for one's behavior to be shaped by incentives, or to cling to the words of experts and/or to follow the crowd. It is difficult for us to see the extraordinary influence of the crowd, family, colleagues and society on us. It is hard for us to see that to be wise we need to maintain our autonomy in the crowd.Pride goes before the fall but we can be alert to the tendencies to overvalue our answers and to see each situation as unique. For example, Mauboussin asks what happens when companies merge. A large percentage of mergers do not work but people still think, "My merger will be different". Our brain follows an old path without the practice of seeing our situation compared to many others, or the inside, outside views as Mauboussin calls them.Most of us can find stories of not thinking twice in the news everyday. In the chapter, "Unintended consequences: Feed an Elk, Starve an Ecosystem," a decision made in 1886 led to complex problems for the entire Yellowstone national park. Do you think this focus on fixing only a part a system might be a fluke? Think again.The New York Times, September 20, 2009, tells us how health officials in Egypt focused on getting rid of pigs to diminish the spread of swine flu. Brains were tricked. The complex system was ignored and this lead to a different health crisis for Egyptians. Cairo now has tons of garbage in the streets that the pigs use to eatFixing one problem and not comprehending the system-wide affect reflects the kind of blindness, which led to the decision to let Lehman go. Those very smart decision makers awoke to finding the financial world close to frozen. By the time they realized how interdependent the system had become it was too late. Seeing the system rather than one or two bad guys is still a stretch for most of us.Mauboussin, a synthesizing detective, gathers knowledge demonstrating how the brain works its short-cut thinking magic. As a system thinker he points out the difficulty in understanding complexity when one believes in such sacred cows such as:(1) Seeing problems as unique and not seeking the statistical outside viewpoints.(2) The way we are programmed by events to have tunnel vision and reduce options.(3) The inconsistent performance of experts in predicting the future.(4) The dominant role of cause and effect thinking even in complex systems.(5) The inability to see the difference between cause and correlations. There are a lot of churches in high crime areas but churches do not cause crimes.(6) The difference between skill and luck, and harder yet, understanding the implications that what goes up will come down, or revision to the mean.(7) One of my favorites is what Mauboussin calls "the grand Ah-Whooms" or the tipping point in non-linear systems. Water boiling is a phase transition as are traffic jams and financial crashes.Mauboussin helps us understand, recognize and even appreciate our vulnerabilities with humorous explanations. He reassures us that we can become more rational by recognizing the traps and applying tools to better cope with the realities of life. Best of all, those who take his work seriously will become more autonomous and responsible even when surrounded by the maddening crowd.Individuals who are engaged in becoming more rational can build our collective wisdom. Mauboussin suggests: 1) keep a decision journal, 2) have a checklist and 3) be aware of the brain's tendency to take clues from the environment. As he explains, there is a clear path through the tangled web of deceit the brain weaves. The brain can learn to rethink and respond better to its environment.Many will march toward a quick consensus. This will remain a formidable intellectual/emotional stumbling block in solving complex issues. To balance this out there will be those leaders who can reverse the current trends towards quick decisions. They will be the ones at ease spending 75% of their time considering how they are thinking about a problem. These more thoughtful decision makers will be able to increase divergent viewpoints, access risk and see possible outcomes more realistically. For these motivated people this book is a well-written guide to engaging the process of thinking Twice.
P**Y
Don't think twice about reading this book
In many ways this book distills the work of Tetlock into a much more digestable format. The book talks about how people are unable to properly calibrate evidence, feeling like they have made progress through capturing more and more information, taking the outside view, etc.The book is so much more than this, and I definitely recommend reading it. Maubousssin highlights the importance of diversity, aggregation and incentives in markets. If one or more of these factors is deficient then markets are unlikely to be efficient. The author also highlights how we fail to understand the context (e.g. in how people behave under different situations) and this leads us into making mental shortcuts.One off the main recommendations from the book is to start using a decision journal to capture your thoughts when making a decision - whether it is your reasoning for making a certain investment or something more important like where to live, who to marry and so on.
S**R
The Process of Decision Making
This is a short book which covers different aspects of decision making. The author with his successful career in the field of investing has explained the common pitfalls in decision making process with a number of practical situations. At the end of each chapter he suggests steps to avoid the pitfall. The last chapter 'Think Twice' is a summary and is immensely useful for all decision makers. The book is highly recommended for Investors and Business Executives.
O**I
a compiled of books that make us think better
I would say the book is a compiled of hundreds of books/articles including famous ones like Thinkink Fast and Slow, Nudge, The Halo Effect among others. I would recommend it, cause is a easy, fast and a very informative reading.For sure it will help u think better.
M**I
INFORMATIVE BOOK
a class book
O**O
Re-Think your Thinking
Fascinating topics brought to life through the use of interesting annecdotes. A book to keep close for reference on how to avoid unintentional missteps in decision making.I Intend to read the other works of this author and look forward to future publications.
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