by Naushad on 4/10/15, 11:14 AM with 24 comments
by chollida1 on 4/10/15, 7:40 PM
There is a phenomenon in finance called Post Earnings Announcement Drift (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-earnings-announcement_drif...), meaning there is a tendency for companies to move too much or too little after announcing their earnings and their price eventually snaps back to a more suitable price.
I spent the better part of 3 months trying all sorts of models to figure out how to trade this.
The most profitable model I could come up with....
Take each analysts who follows the company, rank them by their previous historical success at predicting earnings and then weight each analysts' estimate by the analysts rank.
This grade 8 level math beat out my "fancy" regression models.
I was pretty humbled by that discovery:)
Hopefully my blunder can save someone else here 3 months of their life:)
The only caveat to this is, beware of crowds when guessing costs nothing. When you get free guesses then the results can become useless very quickly.
The analysts rankings work as a financial analyst has exactly one currency, their reputation for predicting earnings. When this goes, so does their job:)
by tessierashpool on 4/10/15, 4:48 PM
"The wisdom of crowds" doesn't refer to a general tendency for large groups of people to be right about anything, under any circumstances. It refers to the fact that crowds with market-like dynamics tend to be surprisingly good at ascertaining information accurately.
It suggests that the whole converging-on-the-right-price aspect of markets might be a specific instance of a more general phenomenon. For instance, gamblers are also quite good at assessing probabilities, and when country fairs hold competitions to see who can guess the weight of a cow, the guesses tend to cluster around the correct answer.
Obviously, as with anything related to economics, there are a ton of caveats, and people who don't understand the phrase's intent have misused it wildly.
by alexashka on 4/10/15, 6:03 PM
"the idea that aggregating or averaging the imperfect, distributed knowledge of a large group of people can often yield better information than canvassing expert opinion."
What? Often? If I have a pain in my lower right abdomen and I poll the human population, I'm going to get a better answer than a doctor?
If I poll the human population about a physics problem, I'm going to get a better answer than a physicist?
"But as Surowiecki himself, and many commentators on his book, have pointed out, circumstances can conspire to undermine the wisdom of crowds. In particular, if a handful of people in a population exert an excessive influence on those around them, a “herding” instinct can kick in, and people will rally around an idea that could turn out to be wrong."
Conspire? Undermine the wisdom? Wow...
So when somebody realized blood-letting wasn't helping, I guess those folk 'conspired' to 'exert an excessive influence on those around them' until a 'herding instinct' kicked in...
Brain explodes from the stupidity
When it's wrong, somebody conspired, when it's right, oh, well, don't mention that it's the exact same process.
by mrep on 4/10/15, 8:24 PM
by bko on 4/10/15, 6:20 PM
He got closer to the actual value.
The wisdom of crowds approach is alive and well in finance. For better or worse, the wisdom of the crowds approach allows an analysis with much less work than the engineering approach. But more importantly, it serves as a type of defense mechanism to the person making the actual prediction especially if he has no skin in the game. If you're way off, at least you're in good company. Okay for counting jelly beans, but it has a potential of being disastrous in other situations.
by simonswords82 on 4/10/15, 4:45 PM
Had I just learned that the wisdom of the crowds was not a thing I would have had to seriously re-evaluate my life!
by napowitzu on 4/10/15, 6:32 PM
The situation described here wouldn't tell you anything about the quality of the restaurants. It might tell you what kind of food that neighborhood prefers. It might tell you which restaurant is more affordable. It might tell you which restaurant has a better public image. Or maybe it just tells you which restaurant is renting out its parking lot to a nearby car repair shop. To wit, quality cannot be determined by observing human behavior. Quality is determined exclusively by predefined parameters. Loudness, brightness, velocity, purity, etc., are measures of quality. In other words, quality is antipodal to popularity. Every human relation to an object, such as cost, availability, relevance, etc., has priority over quality at all times. It is even more accurate to say that quality is never a direct factor in choice. A person does not choose a knife, for example, because it is sharper than other knives; a person chooses the knife because it is sharp enough to meet their needs and, more importantly, because it is accessible to them. The only exception is the case where a person seeks out the highest quality option for the sake of quality itself, i.e. "I want to find the sharpest knife in the world." In this exceptional scenario, however, one learns nothing by studying the quality-seeking crowd that could not have been learned by simply measuring and comparing objects, i.e. it is much easier to find the sharpest knife by measuring knives for sharpness than by trying to determine which humans buy knives strictly because they are sharper than the alternatives (in such a case you would still have to measure the knives to confirm any conclusions you came to). All of this being said, I can't believe people at MIT studying human behavior would make such an absurd analogy. It indicates a complete misunderstanding of not only human beings but of logic as well.
by alwaysdoit on 4/10/15, 7:07 PM
by beefman on 4/10/15, 6:33 PM
http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~ilobel/bayesian-learning-social-...
by seeingfurther on 4/10/15, 6:15 PM
by aet on 4/10/15, 5:55 PM