1. If this house was really worth $500,000, who was the moron selling it for
$250,000? Was this person not willing or able to do the three minutes of
work necessary to determine that comparable houses in the neighborhood
were selling for twice as much? If not, wasn’t there a family member or a
real estate agent—whose commission is based on the sale price—willing to
point out this enormous discrepancy?
2. Maybe not.
In that case, why hasn’t my real estate agent bought this house
for herself? If this house is a “sure thing” to double in price, why is she
working for my 3 percent commission when $250,000 is staring her in the
face?
3. Perhaps my real estate agent is a moron, too. In that case, where are all of
the other buyers looking for bargains, especially
after this house is featured
in
Crain’s Chicago Business? If this brownstone is a tremendous bargain—
and has been widely advertised as such—then presumably all kinds of
people are going to want to buy it. A bidding war would result, with
potential buyers offering larger and larger sums until the price reached its
fair market value, which is around $500,000.
In other words, there is virtually no chance that you will find a Lincoln Park
brownstone (without some surprise lurking in the basement) for $250,000. Why?
Because of the most basic idea in economics. You are trying to maximize your
utility—and so is everyone else. In a world in which everyone is looking to
make
profitable investments, no one is going to leave $250,000 sitting on the
table.
Yet people assume the stock market works like this all the time. We believe
that after reading about a “hot stock” in
BusinessWeek, or reading a Wall Street
analyst’s buy recommendation (offered to all the firm’s clients), we can load up
on stocks that will trounce the market average. But those supposed “hot stocks”
are merely the Lincoln Park brownstone in different clothing. Here’s why:
Let’s start with a stunningly simple but often overlooked point: Every time
you buy a stock (or any other asset), someone has to sell it to you. The guy who
sells you this “hot stock” has decided that he would rather have cash. He has
looked at the current “bargain price” and he wants out—right when you are
getting in. Sure, he may need
the money for something else, but he is still going
to demand a fair market price, just as we would expect someone who has to
move out of Lincoln Park to ask $500,000 for a brownstone, not $250,000. The
stock market, as the name would suggest, is a market. The price of a stock at any
given time is the price at which the number of buyers equals the number of
sellers. Half of the investors trading your “hot stock” are trying to get rid of it.
Or maybe you know something that the sellers don’t. Perhaps all the people
unloading XYZ Corp.
missed the Wall Street Journal article about XYZ’s new
blockbuster drug for male-pattern baldness. Okay, that might happen. But where
are the world’s other sophisticated buyers? This stock is a sure thing at $45, yet
for some reason Warren Buffett, the traders at Goldman Sachs, and the top
Fidelity portfolio managers are not snapping it up. (If they were, the stock would
be bid up to a much higher price, just like the Lincoln Park brownstone.) Do you
know something that no one else on Wall Street knows (bearing
in mind that
trading on any information not available to the public is against the law)?
Or maybe someone on Wall Street is pitching you this stock idea. America’s
brokerage houses employ a cadre of analysts who spend their days kicking the
tires of corporate America. Is all that information wrong? No—though there are
plenty of cases of incompetence and conflict of interest. Analysts provide all
kinds of legitimate information, just like your real estate agent. When you are
shopping for a home, your agent can tell you about neighborhoods, schools,
taxes, crime—the kinds of things that matter. Wall Street analysts do the same
things
for companies; they report on management, future products, the industry,
the competition. But that does nothing to guarantee that you are going to earn an
above-average return on the stock.
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