Practical analysis for investment professionals
08 December 2016

Behavioral Insights on Financial Advice

Saving and investing decisions are often made from opposite sides of the financial services spectrum. Advisers have the difficult job of building trust and bridging the two sides and their diverse demands. Matching the needs of retail savers with investment returns provided by users of capital is not easy as the two opposing sides — one retail and the other wholesale — are structurally and behaviorally different.

Time is another important consideration. Finance professionals look toward the future, matching the future needs of savers with those of capital consumers. Capital investment requirements and financial markets are unpredictable, subject to abrupt and significant changes. Very few can forecast market requirements with accuracy and consistency or outperform the mean for an extended length of time.

This makes the job of wealth advisers exceptionally challenging. Not only must they understand the future needs of each client, they also must identify fund managers who generate investment returns in line with client expectations.

The vast and ever-growing pool of information compounds the problem even further. The data deluge adds to behavioral vulnerabilities, making everyone involved predictably irrational. As Dan Ariely strikingly said, “We were designed with a computation machine, a brain, to deal with jungles and different types of risks. And the machinery that we got did not have to be perfect, but it had to be very accurate. For example, if you see a tiger, you want to run away very, very quickly. You don’t want to stop and think about it. And if it’s not a real tiger, you still want to run away; why take the risk?” The fright and flight response when one sees a tiger is so deeply programmed that the casualty is misconstrued and the “rule of thumb” is often misapplied in investment decision making too.

All of these factors are impediments to clear communication with clients, to building the trust that is at the core of any successful adviser-client relationship.

So what can advisers do to understand and counteract these behavioral limits and build that trust?

It starts with knowing one’s clients — not just their financial means and aspirations, but how they think — and integrating that knowledge into the relationship and the investment plan in an open and forthright manner.

A critical question to address: What are the client’s most dominant behavioral traits?

Behavioral finance literature defines four distinct “investor types”:

  • Preservers have a loss-averse mindset and worry about short-term performance.
  • Followers are passive and often lack interest in investing.
  • Independents have original ideas and like to get involved in the decision-making process.
  • Accumulators are confident and tend to play an active or even controlling role in investment decision making.

These classifications all exist on a continuum, so advisers need to conduct in-depth interviews to get a firm grasp on which traits predominate and to what degree. Once that’s accomplished, advisers can tailor and recommend an investment plan that takes these factors into account. A written investment policy statement (IPS) is essential. The IPS and regular reviews serve as guardrails against the irrational behavior of advisers and clients alike and helps foster the trust between them.

But the adviser’s responsibility doesn’t end there. Few clients are aware of the innate behavioral mechanisms that influence them. Advisers can serve as their behavioral coach and educate them on the emotional biases that affect both client and adviser.

To be sure, trust is behaviorally fragile: hard to earn and easy to lose. Misaligned adviser interest, in particular, can destroy trust. But, on the other hand, sacrificing one’s misaligned interest can build a deeper and lasting engagement with clients.

That’s why it is important to remember that the process of understanding a client, of earning and maintaining that trust, does not have a fixed conclusion. It is an ongoing and perennially unfinished project.

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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.

Image credit: ©Getty Images/retrorocket

About the Author(s)
Shreenivas Kunte, CFA, CIPM

Shreenivas Kunte, CFA, CIPM, is director of content at CFA Institute, where he contributes financial market insights about India and the developed world. Previously, he taught at and managed SP Jain’s Trade and Applied Research lab, which he helped found. Kunte also served as a country trading strategist at Citigroup’s Tokyo office. He actively contributes to the development sector in India and is an external research scholar at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay.

Ethics Statement

Beyond the easier to understand, important codes of conduct, “Ethics” for me is awareness; an endeavor for right thought and action.

5 thoughts on “Behavioral Insights on Financial Advice”

  1. S. Alan McKnight, Jr., CFA says:

    Excellent assessment of the critical, and ongoing, trust building process.

  2. Shreenivas Kunte, CFA says:

    Many thanks Alan for reading the post. I am glad you liked it.

  3. Buddy Powers says:

    “Predictably Irrational” is an accurate two word description of most investors actions in times of extreme market volatility and /or uncertainty.
    In the extreme, humans are lemmings, prone to doing the wrong thing at what was a time of opportunity. Thanks for a good thought provoking piece.

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