
Investments
Fooled by Randomness
Observing the past is easy, but predicting the future is hard. This is further amplified within the investment world because we can easily see past returns, but future returns are unknowable. Investors commonly use past returns to inform their investment strategy even though that logic is misguided. Always be cautious when drawing conclusions from past returns, they have shown us what has happened not what could happen. Let us illustrate this point using historical market returns for the 22 developed global stock markets.
In 2002, out of 22 markets, Sweden and Germany performed the worst. If investing were easy, you would assume that to get better returns the next year, all you must do is avoid the Swedish and German stock markets. Unfortunately, if you did that, in 2003, you would have missed out on the two best-performing markets, which you guessed it, were Sweden and Germany. We trick ourselves into seeing patterns where none exist.


In 2003, out of the 22 markets, the worst-performing market was Finland. You could assume that what goes down must come up and allocate a large portion of your investments to Finland. But, in the following year (2004), the worst performing market for the second year in a row was Finland. The randomness of the market continues.


To correct this, you decide to zoom out and look for patterns that persist over long periods. But what would constitute a long enough period? If 1-year increments contain randomness, then you could try and look at a 6-year pattern?
For the six years between 2002 and 2007, the US market was consistently a poor performing market. Furthermore, in each of those six years, our home country of Canada drastically outperformed the US. Why bother with international diversification? But, as you may have guessed, after 2007 the US market began a tremendous run, the pace of which has far outpaced that of the Canadian market.
