Stock Market Investing

Question A:

In general, absent any proprietary information, a retail equity investor cannot consistently make accurate predictions about whether the price of an individual stock will rise or fall on a given day.

Responses weighted by each expert's confidence

Question B:

In general, absent any proprietary information, a retail equity investor can expect to do better by holding a well-diversified, low-fee, passive index fund than by holding a few stocks.

Responses weighted by each expert's confidence

Question A Participant Responses

Participant University Vote Confidence Bio/Vote History
Campbell
John Campbell
Harvard
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
This is certainly true for liquid stocks, although for certain illiquid stocks "bid-ask bounce" can generate predictable daily movements (but one cannot profit from these).
Cochrane
John Cochrane
Hoover Institution Stanford
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
If the average investor (weighted by wealth) could predict the stock to rise, the stock would go up right away. Half of the predictions must be wrong.
Cornelli
Francesca Cornelli
Northwestern Kellogg Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Diamond
Douglas Diamond
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Du
Wenxin Du
HBS
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Duffie
Darrell Duffie
Stanford
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Market clearing generally implies that the price reflects commonly available information.
Eberly
Janice Eberly
Northwestern Kellogg
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Fama
Eugene Fama
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Gabaix
Xavier Gabaix
Harvard
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Goldstein
Itay Goldstein
UPenn Wharton
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Graham
John Graham
Duke Fuqua
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Harvey
Campbell R. Harvey
Duke Fuqua
Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Hong
Harrison Hong
Columbia
Strongly Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
Jiang
Wei Jiang
Emory Goizueta
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Kaplan
Steven Kaplan
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Kashyap
Anil Kashyap
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Everyone should have to read Ken French's Presidential Address to the American Finance Association on the perils of active investing.
-see background information here
Koijen
Ralph Koijen
Chicago Booth Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Kuhnen
Camelia Kuhnen
UNC Kenan-Flagler
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Lo
Andrew Lo
MIT Sloan
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
The competition in this endeavor, just among the top 10 investment banks, is intense, not to mention the hedge-fund industry, so retail investors don't have a chance.
Lowry
Michelle Lowry
Drexel LeBow
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Ludvigson
Sydney Ludvigson
NYU
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Maggiori
Matteo Maggiori
Stanford GSB Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Matvos
Gregor Matvos
Northwestern Kellogg
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Moskowitz
Tobias Moskowitz
Yale School of Management
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Forecasting daily returns is extremely difficult since daily price changes are dominated by news and noise, which are both unpredictable.
Nagel
Stefan Nagel
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Parker
Jonathan Parker
MIT Sloan
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
There is some predictability in a stock's return at longer horizons, but a retail investor cannot consistently predict stock movements day to day. The vast majority of day to day stock price movements are unpredictable even to experts with proprietary information.
Parlour
Christine Parlour
Berkeley Haas
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Philippon
Thomas Philippon
NYU Stern
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Puri
Manju Puri
Duke Fuqua
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Roberts
Michael R. Roberts
UPenn Wharton
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Sapienza
Paola Sapienza
Northwestern Kellogg
Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Seru
Amit Seru
Stanford GSB
Strongly Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Stambaugh
Robert Stambaugh
UPenn Wharton
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Starks
Laura Starks
UT Austin McCombs
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Stein
Jeremy Stein
Harvard
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Stroebel
Johannes Stroebel
NYU Stern
Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Titman
Sheridan Titman
UT Austin McCombs
Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Van Nieuwerburgh
Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
Columbia Business School
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
ample empirical evidence that retail investors systematically underperform
Whited
Toni Whited
UMich Ross School
Strongly Agree
1
Bio/Vote History

Question B Participant Responses

Participant University Vote Confidence Bio/Vote History
Campbell
John Campbell
Harvard
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
With equal expected returns, diversification reduces risk and is one of the few "free lunches" in economics. And typical retail investors can't increase their expected returns through stock-picking. They may benefit from factor exposure but that remains diversified.
Cochrane
John Cochrane
Hoover Institution Stanford
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Again, the average investor theorem proves this must be true on average.
Cornelli
Francesca Cornelli
Northwestern Kellogg Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Diamond
Douglas Diamond
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Du
Wenxin Du
HBS
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Duffie
Darrell Duffie
Stanford
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
From my response to the first question (prices reflect information), for a given return volatility, mean portfolio returns are improved less by stock selection than by levered diversified positions. (Bill Sharpe)
Eberly
Janice Eberly
Northwestern Kellogg
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Fama
Eugene Fama
Chicago Booth
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Do better is too vague.
Gabaix
Xavier Gabaix
Harvard
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Goldstein
Itay Goldstein
UPenn Wharton
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Graham
John Graham
Duke Fuqua
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Harvey
Campbell R. Harvey
Duke Fuqua
Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
The question is what does "do better" mean? The investor might have lottery-like preferences leading to an undiversified portfolio.
Hong
Harrison Hong
Columbia
Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Jiang
Wei Jiang
Emory Goizueta
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Kaplan
Steven Kaplan
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Kashyap
Anil Kashyap
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Great advice for almost everyone. We should all thank Jack Bogle
Koijen
Ralph Koijen
Chicago Booth Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Kuhnen
Camelia Kuhnen
UNC Kenan-Flagler
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Lo
Andrew Lo
MIT Sloan
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
The historical data are pretty clear on this point, especially over investment periods longer than a few years. Obviously, within shorter samples, anything can happen.
Lowry
Michelle Lowry
Drexel LeBow
Strongly Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Ludvigson
Sydney Ludvigson
NYU
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Maggiori
Matteo Maggiori
Stanford GSB Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Matvos
Gregor Matvos
Northwestern Kellogg
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Moskowitz
Tobias Moskowitz
Yale School of Management
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
I’m assuming by “better” we mean on a risk-adjusted basis or for cumulative wealth. Holding a well-diversified portfolio at the same expected return is better for accumulating wealth over long horizons. A single stock with the same return and much higher vol. is worse.
Nagel
Stefan Nagel
Chicago Booth
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Parker
Jonathan Parker
MIT Sloan
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Parlour
Christine Parlour
Berkeley Haas
Agree
8
Bio/Vote History
Philippon
Thomas Philippon
NYU Stern
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Puri
Manju Puri
Duke Fuqua
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Roberts
Michael R. Roberts
UPenn Wharton
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Sapienza
Paola Sapienza
Northwestern Kellogg
Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Seru
Amit Seru
Stanford GSB
Strongly Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Stambaugh
Robert Stambaugh
UPenn Wharton
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Starks
Laura Starks
UT Austin McCombs
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Stein
Jeremy Stein
Harvard
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Stroebel
Johannes Stroebel
NYU Stern
Strongly Agree
10
Bio/Vote History
Titman
Sheridan Titman
UT Austin McCombs
Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Van Nieuwerburgh
Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh
Columbia Business School
Strongly Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Whited
Toni Whited
UMich Ross School
Strongly Agree
1
Bio/Vote History