Sinopsis
The Money, Mind and Meaning podcast is a weekly production designed to help you do well, do good and do you. Each week, asset manager, psychologist and New York Times bestselling author Dr. Daniel Crosby will take on a different facet of human behavior and ask, "Why?" Episodes are brief, research based and created to give you something interesting to share at the dinner table. Learn more by following Dr. Daniel @danielcrosby or by visiting www.nocturnecapital.com.
Episodios
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You Worry About The Wrong Things
18/05/2018 Duración: 10minIt's human nature to worry about low probability/high salience things and ignore threats that are far more immediate and pervasive. Tune in to learn why and what to do about it.
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Behavioral Feedback Loops In Financial Markets
15/05/2018 Duración: 14minFeedback loops exist in relationships, nature and especially in financial markets. In today's episode, we examine how capital markets operate in boom and bust cycles due to our subjective perceptions.
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The Two Conditions For Trusting Your Gut
14/05/2018 Duración: 12minCan you trust your gut? Well...sometimes. Today on the podcast we look at the two conditions that must be met in order for intuition to be useful. Even the best-informed intuition is only as good as the milieu in which it finds itself and environmental cues remain the best predictor of whether or not intuition can be trusted. In the absence of a certain level of predictability and rapid feedback, neither of which are present in financial markets, intuition lacks soil fertile enough to take root. We have reason to trust the intuition of a NICU nurse, a physicist or a mathematician, but very little reason believe the instincts of a therapist or stock picker (sadly, I am both). Such intuitive shortcomings are not the fault of the experts in question but rather the discipline in which they ply their trade. As Murray Gell-Mann correctly noted, “Imagine how hard physics would be if electrons could think.” Intuition is powerful in many domains but ill suited to the vagaries of allocating capital.
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Why Positivity Beats Negativity In Bringing About Behavior Change
07/05/2018 Duración: 17minListen in this week to learn: Why positivity brings about more lasting change than negativity How making lists of "not to do" can have a paradoxical effect Why labeling ourselves and others can blind us to the true state of things
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More Info, More Problems
29/04/2018 Duración: 20minIt is often assumed that there is a positive, linear relationship between information and market efficiency. It stands to reason, at least to a point, that the more publicly available information we have about a security, the greater our ability to accurately price that security. But is it possible that too much information can be as bad for efficiency as too little? As reported in Scientific American, the amount of data that we produce doubles each year. To put it more concretely, in 2016, humankind produced as much data is in the entire history of the species through 2015. The publication’s best estimate for the future of data is that in the next decade there will be 150 billion networked measuring sensors, 20 for every man, woman and child on Earth. At this point, the amount of data that we produce will double every 12 hours. We are a culture in love with data and tend to take a “more is better” approach when it comes to measuring and reporting on every part of our world. But the glut of information floodi
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You Will Never Have Enough Money
23/04/2018 Duración: 16minWe’re all familiar with the term “keeping up with the Joneses” but it’s doubtful that we understand just how deeply ingrained this is in our concept of wealth and success. Each year, a Gallup poll asks Americans to determine “What is the smallest amount of money a family of four needs to get along in this community?” Gallup finds that the answers to this question moves up in line with average incomes of the respondents. A recent Princeton study set out to answer the age-old question, “Can money buy happiness?” Their answer? Sort of. Researchers found that making little money did not cause sadness in and of itself but it did tend to heighten and exacerbate existing worries. For instance, among people who were divorced, 51% of those who made less than $1,000/month reported having felt sad or stressed the previous day, whereas that number fell to 24% among those earning more than $3,000/month. Having more money seems to provide those undergoing adversity with greater security and resources for dealing with their
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The Psychology Of Investment Momentum
16/04/2018 Duración: 13minMomentum has existed for hundreds of years and has persisted for two decades post discovery. This sort of staying power in capital markets full of hungry arbitrageurs is always the mark of human psychology. Many experts consider momentum to not just be a factor but THE factor. Fama and French don’t mince words, “The premier market anomaly is momentum. Stocks with low returns over the past year tend to have low returns for the next few months, and stocks with high past returns tend to have high future returns.” As James O’Shaughnessy says, “of all the beliefs on Wall Street, price momentum makes efficient market theorists howl the loudest.” In a perfect world, there would be no good reason to pay more for a business today than yesterday simply because of positive price action. But this isn’t a perfect world, it’s a world ruled by human behaviour and thus exhibits all of the attendant quirks. Like peanut butter and chocolate, momentum and value are wonderful on their own, but even better together. Cliff Asness
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The Shape Of Financial Bubbles
09/04/2018 Duración: 15minIn this episode we look answer: How do financial bubbles form? How likely is a bubble to burst? How can I know a bubble when I see one?
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The Most Powerful, Least Uttered Phrase
03/04/2018 Duración: 12minWhat seldom-uttered phrase can make you wealthier and more likeable? Why did a bank robber use lemonade to commit crimes? Why don't dumb people know how dumb they are?
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Your Money And Your Brain
26/03/2018 Duración: 12minYour brain is a miracle unrivaled by even the most sophisticated technology, but it is a miracle equipped for a different time and place. After millennia of fighting famine, war and pestilence, we now live in a society of greater and greater ease that is increasingly left to fight psychological battles. Obesity will kill more people this year than hunger. Suicide claims more lives annually than war, terrorism and violent crime combined. Your brain is still fighting a war won eons ago and you must steel it for a new battle that rewards patience and consistency over speed and strength.
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The Joys And Pains Of Comparing Yourself To Others
19/03/2018 Duración: 09minLet me ask you a question, “Do you like laugh tracks?” Didn’t think so. If laugh tracks are so universally disliked, why do Hollywood executives continue to include them? These executives understand something that we may not; however irksome canned laughter may be, it provides valuable social cues to viewers. Research has repeatedly shown that laugh tracks cause viewers to laugh longer and harder and to rate the viewing experience as more enjoyable. In fact, laugh tracks have been shown to be most effective at improving the appraisals of jokes that are especially bad! We are programmed to do what others are doing, even when those others only exist on tape. Social mimicry is ubiquitous. Panhandlers often salt their tip jars with money from the day before to show that giving is proper behavior and that other people have deemed them worthy of a handout. A beggar with no money in his cup is perhaps more deserving of a dollar, but also far less likely to get that dollar than the beggar who already has three. One
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Why Is Change So Hard?
12/03/2018 Duración: 13minHow many decisions would you guess that you make in a given day? Take a second, mentally walk through your day and hazard a guess. Most people I ask this question land somewhere around 100, which is way off – try 35,000. That’s right, you make 35,000 decisions per day. Canonical models of decision-making deal with two types of decisions – certain (i.e., with a known set of alternatives with certain outcomes) and uncertain (just the opposite). In theory, decisions made under conditions of certainty involve ranking the known alternatives and choosing the most preferred option, simple enough. Uncertain decisions operate from a similar theory, with the only kink being that subjective probabilities are assigned to the different outcome likelihoods. Thus, decision makers weigh the desirability of a given option by the chance that it will or won’t occur. These are nice ideas and make a certain amount of sense until you consider the sheer volume of decisions we make each day. When you consider that you make 12,775,00
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Humankind's Greatest GIft Is Also Its Greatest Liability
06/03/2018 Duración: 13minIf bees organize by innate mandate and chimps through tight-knit social interactions, the miracle of human ascendance in the animal kingdom owes to a penchant for behaving in accordance with social narratives. To put it bluntly, we act as if the stories we make up are real. As Harari writes in the magisterial Sapiens, “As far as we know, only Sapiens can talk about entire kinds of entities that they have never seen, touched or smelled.” A monkey can say, “There is a caribou by the river” but could never communicate that, “The caribou by the river is the spiritual guardian of our city.” This ability to communicate about the unreal allows us to create all manner of social structures that help bring about predictable human behavior and that reliably breed trust. The State of Alabama, the Catholic church, the Constitution of the United States of America, the inalienable civil rights of man: none of these things are “real” in the strictest sense, but our shared belief in them and behaving as though they are real b
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Why That Thing You Want Won't Be Satisfying Once You Actually Get It
28/02/2018 Duración: 13minWe’re all familiar with the term “keeping up with the Joneses” but it’s doubtful that we understand just how deeply ingrained this is in our concept of success and how the neurological processes we’ve touched on here contribute. Each year, a Gallup poll asks Americans to determine “What is the smallest amount of money a family of four needs to get along in this community?” Gallup finds that the answers to this question moves up in line with average incomes of the respondents. “Enough”, it seems, is a moving target that our flawed neurology won’t quite let us scratch. The amount of money we need to survive is just a little bit more than we have right now. Our brains push us toward comparative notions of financial wellbeing that only provide transitory joy, but understanding our limitations is a first step toward making a different choice. Indeed, the Western tendency toward outward displays of wealth and comparative measurement is not endemic to all developed countries. Switzerland is just one example of a ver
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How To Avoid Financial Scams
20/02/2018 Duración: 09minHow to Avoid Financial Scams Stephen Greenspan is a psychologist and author of the Annals of Gullibility: Why We Get Duped and How to Avoid It. Greenspan’s book outlines notable instances of gullibility including the Trojan Horse, the failure to locate weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and the bad science surrounding cold fusion. Most of the book focuses on anecdotes, but the final chapter sets forth the anatomy of being fooled and attributes it to some combination of the following factors: • Social pressures – Fraud is often committed within “affinity groups” such as people who hail from a similar religious background. • Cognition – At some level, being duped represents a lack of knowledge or clarity of thought (but not necessarily a lack of intelligence). • Personality – A propensity toward belief and difficulty saying “no” may lead people to be taken advantage of. • Emotion – The prospect of some emotional payday (e.g., the thrill of making easy money) often catalyzes questionable decision-making. In a f
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Market Corrections Are As Regular As Your Birthday
17/02/2018 Duración: 05minThere are three things that intelligent investors must understand if they are to truly inoculate themselves against the fear peddled by the profiteers of peril: corrections and bear markets are a common part of any investment lifetime, they represent a long-term buying opportunity and a systematic process is required to take advantage of them. A “correction” is defined as a 10% drop in stock prices, whereas a “bear market” is defined as a 20% drop. Both definitions are entirely arbitrary, but inasmuch as they are widely watched and impact the behaviour of other investors, they are worth considering. From 1900 to 2013, the US stock market experienced 123 corrections – an average of one per year! The more dramatic losses that are the hallmark of a bear market occur slightly less frequently, averaging one every 3.5 years. Although the media talks about 10% to 20% market losses as though they are the end of the world, they arrive as regularly as spring flowers and have not negated the tendency of markets to drama
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Crowd Wisdom And The Anatomy Of A Good Decision
13/10/2017 Duración: 11minWe rely on the crowd to do everything from run our governments to help us select a place to eat, but does the wisdom of the crowd apply to the stock market? By examining the anatomy of a good decision set forth by Richard Thaler we arrive at the conclusion that crowds are wise in some respects but can lead us astray in others.
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The Three Tests Of An Investable Idea
28/08/2017 Duración: 13minIt has been said that "this time is different" is the most expensive phrase in investing but what can be said to be the most profitable words in investing? In this episode, we look at the three tests of an investable idea, providing a tri-part test for discovering enduring alpha.
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Did You Choose To Listen To This Podcast?
22/08/2017 Duración: 20minDid you choose to listen to this podcast? The question seems so simple as to be laughable, but new research paints an increasingly complicated picture with respect to the limits of willpower and free will. In this episode, we tackle such questions as: Why do Audi drivers cheat on their spouses? and Would you have hidden Anne Frank in the attic?
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The One Phrase That's True in Every Situation
15/08/2017 Duración: 11minLet's face it, life is complicated. That being the case, it tends to defy easy description and silly platitudes. But one phrase proves to be applicable to every market and life circumstance. Listen in to learn the phrase that can humble you in times of prosperity and give you solace in times of struggle.