When most investors think about risk management, concepts such as volatility or capital loss typically come to mind. These risks are important to consider, but a less obvious source of risk lies within investors themselves. By addressing decision-making processes and the biases that are common to us all, Alesco Advisors can implement investment strategies that help to effectively achieve our clients’ goals.
Intuition vs. Analysis
The processes humans use to make decisions rely on two modes of thinking. Sometimes we use our intuitive mode to make decisions in an instant, relying on instinct in order to guide actions toward achieving a desired goal. In other cases, we slow down and use our analytical mode to deliberately scrutinize potential actions in the context of our objectives to promote an effective outcome. [1]
Our intuitive mode is helpful in situations when true optimization isn’t necessary because a mere satisfactory outcome might suffice— think about picking an apple from a display at the grocery store. It’s also highly effective in situations where instant decisions are imperative—imagine deciding whether to swerve or brake to avoid an object in the road while driving. It’s proven remarkably useful in the survival of our species, so we all have an evolutionary predisposition to rely on it often.
Our analytical mode allows us to undertake a process that follows an orderly series of logical steps. It leads to more effective decision-making in cases when it’s both desirable and possible to invest the time, cognitive effort, and attention to promote the best outcome. It’s the kind of thinking that’s best suited to making some of life’s biggest decisions—which career to pursue, what house to buy, and how to structure an investment portfolio to gain the highest probability of achieving your goals.
Implementing a disciplined, data-driven investment process is an important form of risk management for Alesco Advisors. Complex choices regarding investment management are too important to make on behalf of our clients using intuition alone. By interrogating our own thinking and engaging our analytical mode, we ensure the appropriate time, thought, and effort is dedicated to the issues that matter most to achieving investment goals.
Managing Process Risk
Disciplined analysis is a necessary step in managing decision-making risk, but even analytical thinking can be prone to the pitfalls and traps of the human mind. Intuition is impossible to completely “turn off”, so it’s active even when engaging our analytical mode. Our intuitions rely on mental shortcuts, which social scientists call “heuristics”, to simplify decisions. Relying on these heuristics in complex situations can create problems that lead to errors in analysis.
These errors, which social scientists call “biases”, are impossible to completely suppress—after all, we’re only human. But research shows that defending against these biases as they emerge is possible, and begins with an awareness of their existence. Only then can biases be accounted for and addressed.
Some of the more common biases are listed below along with examples of how Alesco effectively manages the risk each presents.
Alesco’s investment team understands these types of biases pose risks in any complex decision-making process. It's impossible to avoid these biases completely as they are hard-wired in human intuition, which can never be “turned off” in full. But we can commit to following a deliberate process grounded in objectivity in which we engage our analytical mode and call out potential intuitive biases. By doing so, Alesco is able to account for biases, address them, and manage the risk they pose to effective investment decision-making.
[1] These two modes of thinking form the basis of Dual Process Theory, a concept developed over the course of decades by social scientists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. In his book Thinking, Fast and Slow (2011), Kahneman provides an account of the research, observations, and experiments that led to the development of their theories regarding human decision-making.
The content in this blog post is provided for informational purposes only, and should not be construed as personalized investment advice. The data and information used in the preparation of this blog post are obtained from third-party sources believed to be reliable, but Alesco Advisors does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the data and information.