How to Be a Better Market Speculator

 | Jun 27, 2023 03:16AM ET

One of my favorite economic thinkers is Michael Mauboussin.

His book – More Than You Know: Finding Financial Wisdom in Unconventional Places – and various other ‘white papers’ by him have impacted my thought process (and trading philosophy) deeply.

But there’s one specific concept that really stuck with me – and I believe should be in your ‘mental toolbox’.

I’m talking about ‘Expected Value Analysis’ (EVA) – or what Mauboussin called – the Babe Ruth Effect.

We can summarize EVA up like this: it’s not the frequency of correctness that matters. But rather the magnitude of correctness that does. . .

Just like how even though Babe Ruth struck out a lot. He was still one of the greatest hitters ever to play baseball.

Even Charlie Munger – aka “Warren Buffet’s smarter half” – uses EVA often when making decisions.

He said – “… Take the probability of loss times the amount of possible loss from the probability of gain times the amount of possible gain. That is what we’re trying to do. It’s imperfect, but that’s what it’s all about…”

Keep in mind that EVA is critical across various fields that depend on probabilities – such as investing, gambling, and horse-and-sport betting.

h2 Prospect Theory: Humans Really Hate Losing/h2

So, what exactly is EVA?

For starters – it all begins with a flaw in human cognition. . .

Back in the late 1970s, the famous behavioral economists – Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky – created Prospect Theory.

Prospect Theory’s the concept that humans value losses and gains very differently. Specifically, that individuals really don’t like losses – no matter how small the stakes.

In fact – Kahneman and Tversky found that losses have about two-and-a-half times (2.5x) the impact that a similar gain does. Meaning people feel a loss much more deeply than when they get a win.