The Timeless Nature of the Herd Mentality

The Timeless Nature of the Herd Mentality

by Ben Carlson, A Wealth of Common Sense

Gustave Le Bon was a French psychologist who wrote The Crowd: A Study of the Popular MindĀ all the way backĀ inĀ 1895. The passage sums up his findings pretty well (emphasis mine):

The most striking peculiarity presented by a psychological crowd is the following: Whoever be the individuals that compose it, however like or unlike be their mode of life, their occupations, their character, or their intelligence, the fact that they have been transformed into a crowd puts them in possession of a sort of collective mind that makes them feel, think and act in a manner quite different from that in which each individual of them would feel, think and act were he in a state of isolation. There are certain feelings that do not come into being, or do not transform themselves into acts, except in the case of individuals forming a crowd.

The herd mentality is something that I find facsinating when it comes to the market. Sometimes the crowd is right. Other times people collectively lose their minds when following the actions of others. Investors often get caught up in this type of mindset during times of euphoria or panic because thereā€™s a safety in numbers. People look around to see what everyone else is doing and allow the crowd to guide their actions because itā€™s a comforting feeling to do what everyone else does.

Another great take on the herd mentality comes fromĀ one of my favorite books on financial market history, Devil Take the HindmostĀ (again, emphasis mine):

The intellectual inferiority of the crowd is a sign that people are filtering and manipulating new information to make it accord with their existing beliefs. Psychologists call this behavior ā€œcognitive dissonance.ā€ Dissonant information, which contradicts the collective fantasy, is uncomfortable and people seek to avoid it. They may do this either by shooting the messenger or by proselytizing and seeking fresh converts to their fold. In his Theory of Cognitive Dissonance, Leon Festinger argued that people will tolerate increasing degrees of dissonance if they are motivated by a sufficiently enticing reward. In financial markets one might say they are prepared to ignore bad news because they still hunger after the immediate profits of speculation. A description of the speculators in William Fowlerā€™s circle during the 1860s provides and illustration of this behavior. They were engaged, wrote Fowler, ā€œin bolstering each other up, not for money, for we thought ourselves impregnable in that respect, but by argument in favor of another rise. We knew we were wrong, but tried to convince ourselves that we were right.ā€

What I find amazing about these passages from the 1800s is how relavant they remain in todayā€™s day and age. Although market structure and technological innovation mean todayā€™s markets donā€™t come close to resembling those of the past, human nature is always the constant. It seems these gentlemen were early adoptors of behavioral economics.

People are quick to blame every market move on the Fed these days. Itā€™s as if they think bubbles didnā€™t exist in the pre-Fed era. Maybe the Fed changes the timing and the magnitude of these things, but it would be silly to assume that human behavior wouldnā€™t cause the pendulum to swing too far in both directions even if the Fed didnā€™t exist (do yourself a favor and see what the economy was like before Fed intervention).

Herd behavior comes about because of the fear of missing out, the fear of being in, ignorance, greed and loss aversion.Ā The technical reason is different ever time something gets too far our of whack in the markets, but the real reason never changes ā€” weā€™re human.

Sources:
The Crowd: A Study of the Popular MindĀ 
Devil Take The Hindmost

Further Reading:
The Value of I Donā€™t Know

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Copyright Ā© Ben Carlson, A Wealth of Common Sense

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