Let's Talk About the Bubble in Catastrophizing
by Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism
Thereās a bubble in catastrophizing. Ā This is the tendency to always assume the worst. Ā Which is weird because the worst rarely plays out. In fact, even in worst case scenarios the financial markets have tended to stabilize fairly fast. Larry Swedroe had a good piece today on the trend in catastrophizing everything noting 3 particularly scary instances:
- From 1973 through 1974, the S&P 500 Index lost a total of 37%. Over the next five years, it returned almost 15% per year. And over 25 years, it returned more than 17% per year.
- From April 2000 through February 2003, the S&P 500 Index lost an even greater totalāmore than 41%. Then, from March 2003 through October 2007, the index returned more than 100%, providing an annualized return of more than 16%.
- From November 2007 through February 2009, the S&P 500 Index lost a still-greater totalā more than 46%. Then, from March 2009 through November 2015, the index returned 227%, or more than 19% per year.
Thereās a huge bubble in doom saying. I donāt know if itās the boom/bust cycle of the last 15 years irrationally impacting psychology or what, but these perennial predictors of doom seem to spend a lot more time being wrong than right, but disproportionately hog the airwaves. Ā Itās probably our tendency towards lossĀ aversion, but despite vast evidence of this biasĀ in the behavioral finance space on this topicĀ¹, we just canāt seem to break free from our obsession with the end of the financial worldā¦.
NB ā Am I the only one who isnāt too stupid to properly enunciate the word catastrophize?
Sources:
Ā¹ ā Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk, Kahneman and Tversky
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