The largest gap in most people's investing results is not the gap between a good fund and a mediocre one. It is the gap between the return a fund delivered and the return its investors actually earned — because they bought it after it ran up and sold it after it fell. That gap has a name in industry research, the behavior gap, and it is not caused by a lack of information. It is caused by predictable, well-documented bugs in how humans process risk, recency, and social proof. If you treat those bugs the way you would treat any other known failure mode — by building guardrails around them — you remove most of the damage.
Why Biases Beat Knowledge
The instinct is to think more knowledge fixes bad decisions. It rarely does. Behavioral biases are not gaps in understanding; they are the default settings of human cognition under uncertainty, and they fire whether or not you know their names. A professional who can explain loss aversion in detail still feels the urge to sell during a crash.
This matters because it changes the fix. You do not out-think a bias in the moment it strikes — the moment a bias strikes is precisely when your judgment is compromised. You defeat it ahead of time, by deciding what you will do before the pressure arrives and removing your in-the-moment discretion. The rest of this article is biases first, guardrails second, because the guardrail only makes sense once you see the specific bug it contains.
Loss Aversion and the Disposition Effect
Loss aversion is the best-documented bias in the set: a loss of a given size feels roughly twice as painful as an equivalent gain feels good. The asymmetry is not irrational on its own, but it produces irrational investing behavior.
The clearest symptom is the disposition effect — the tendency to sell winners too early and hold losers too long. Selling a winner locks in a gain, which feels good. Selling a loser forces you to realize the loss and admit the decision was wrong, which feels bad, so people postpone it. The result is a portfolio quietly curated in the wrong direction: the strong positions trimmed away, the weak ones nursed in the hope of breaking even.
Loss aversion also drives the most expensive single action in investing — selling during a deep drawdown. The pain of watching a balance fall overwhelms the abstract knowledge that selling converts a recoverable paper loss into a permanent one.
"I'll sell once it gets back to what I paid" is loss aversion talking, not analysis. The price you happened to pay is invisible to the market and irrelevant to whether the investment is worth holding today. Anchoring a decision to your purchase price — rather than to the asset's current merits and your plan — is one of the most common and most costly errors.
Recency Bias: The Last Few Years Feel Like the Rule
Recency bias is the tendency to weight recent experience far more heavily than long-run base rates. After a long bull market, risk feels theoretical and people drift toward more aggressive allocations than they would otherwise choose. After a crash, risk feels permanent and people abandon equities near the bottom, exactly when expected future returns have improved.
It also distorts how people choose investments. A fund that performed well over the last three years feels like a safe pick, even though performance chasing — buying what just went up — is close to the definition of the behavior gap. The recent past is vivid and available; the longer history that would put it in context is not, so the recent past wins.
Overconfidence and the Illusion of Control
Most people rate themselves above-average drivers, and most investors believe they can pick better-than-average investments. Both cannot be true. Overconfidence shows up as overtrading — the more confident an investor is in each decision, the more they trade, and a large body of research finds that more active individual traders tend to underperform less active ones after costs.
A close relative is the illusion of control: the feeling that effort and attention improve outcomes. With a car, they do. With a diversified market return, the effort of constant tinkering mostly generates costs, taxes, and opportunities to mistime. The activity feels productive. The results say otherwise.
There is a useful distinction between things your effort genuinely improves and things it does not. Your savings rate, your costs, your tax efficiency, and your asset allocation all respond to deliberate effort. The next month's market return does not. Overconfidence spends energy on the second category at the expense of the first.
Herding and Confirmation: The Social Failure Modes
The remaining biases are social. Herding is the comfort of doing what everyone else is doing — moving into an asset because it is the subject of every conversation, or out of one because the mood has turned. It feels safe because the crowd provides cover, but the crowd is most unanimous precisely at the extremes, when an asset is most overpriced or most oversold.
Confirmation bias is the tendency to seek and believe information that supports a position you already hold, and to discount what contradicts it. Once you own something, your feed quietly fills with reasons you were right. The contrary evidence is still there; you just stop clicking it. The combination is dangerous: herding gets you into a crowded position, and confirmation bias keeps you from noticing the exits.
Building Guardrails Instead of Willpower
The fix for a predictable bug is not to try harder in the moment. It is to design the system so the bug cannot fire, or so it does the least damage. A few guardrails that map directly onto the biases above:
- A written investment policy. Decide your target allocation, your contribution rate, and your rebalancing rule once, in calm conditions, and write them down. A written rule is something you violate deliberately, which is far harder than drifting.
- Automation. Automatic contributions and automatic rebalancing remove the moments of discretion where recency bias and loss aversion would otherwise operate. You cannot performance-chase a transfer that already happened on schedule.
- Friction on action, not on inaction. Most behavioral damage comes from acting at the wrong time. A self-imposed waiting period — no portfolio changes for a set number of days after deciding to make one — lets the emotional spike pass before it becomes a trade.
- A decision journal. Write down why you made each significant decision and what you expected. Reviewing it later is the only honest defense against confirmation bias and hindsight rewriting.
The single highest-value guardrail is to make your default action "do nothing" and require a deliberate, written override to change course. Most biases push you toward action — selling, chasing, tinkering. If inaction is the path of least resistance, the biases have to overcome friction to cause damage, instead of being the friction-free default.
You will not eliminate these biases. They are running on hardware you cannot patch, and feeling the urge to sell in a crash is not a personal failing — it is the species-standard response. The realistic goal is to arrange your decisions so the urge meets a system that does not obey it. Treating your own predictable irrationality as a known constraint to design around, rather than a flaw to be ashamed of, is most of what separates a calm investor from an anxious one. None of this is personalized advice; it is a description of common failure modes and the structural defenses against them.
Originally published at pickuma.com. Subscribe to the RSS or follow @pickuma.bsky.social for new reviews.
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