• What we do
    • Wealth management services
    • Our approach
    • Working together
  • About us
    • Our team
    • Our company
    • Community engagement
    • Vista news and events
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Portal login
  • Disclosures
The latest insights
  • Navigating wealth transfer: Insights from our panel discussion
  • Still the world’s safe haven: The strength of U.S. Treasury bonds 
  • Opinion: With the market a mess, the stock pickers are back
Portal
Let's talk
  • What we do
    • Wealth management services
    • Our approach
    • Working together
  • About us
    • Our team
    • Our company
    • Community engagement
    • Vista news and events
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Portal login
  • Disclosures

Overconfidence and Humble Pie

Published on May 28, 2014
Author: Dougal Williams, CFA

Why do so many investors attempt to beat the market each year when research clearly shows their odds of success are extremely low?

Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman, the only psychologist ever to win the Nobel Prize in Economics, says human behavioral biases are to blame. Kahneman’s research reveals people are naturally overconfident. Survey results routinely illustrate this tendency—most respondents rate themselves as above-average drivers (an obvious statistical impossibility).

The same bias applies to the investment world. Duke’s Fuqua School of Business has conducted a quarterly poll of Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) since 1996. The Duke CFO Magazine survey[1] asks hundreds of CFOs from the country’s top companies for forecasts on a range of economic issues, including future stock returns. One can easily imagine how CFOs, those closest to the financial pulse of American business, could feel self-assured gauging the prospects of individual companies and the economy at large. Their results, however, undermine that confidence.

As it turns out, these CFOs have no idea what the market is going to do—the correlation between their market forecasts and realized returns is actually negative (markets tend to move in the opposite direction of their forecasts). What’s most alarming is the confidence with which they make such inaccurate forecasts.

The CFOs are asked to provide a range of expected returns wide enough that actual results will fall within the range 80% of the time. According to Kahneman, the executives’ overconfidence causes them to make their ranges much too narrow.[2] The result is actual returns fall within their predicted range just 33% of the time. “They have no idea,” says Kahneman, but “they don’t know it.”

The lesson? Adding an occasional slice of humble pie to your diet is good for your financial health.
________________________________________
[1] Itzhak Ben-David, John Graham and Campbell Harvey. “Managerial Miscalibration.” July 2010.
[2] Housel, Morgan. “An interview with Dr. Daniel Kahneman.” June 28, 2013.

Dougal Williams, CFA
Published on May 28, 2014

Connect with Dougal Williams, CFA

  • LinkedIn

Discover More

  • Team Profile

Article tags
Investor behavior

Related articles
Investing

Still the world’s safe haven: The strength of U.S. Treasury bonds 

ArticleJune 4, 2025By Alex Canellopoulos, CFA, CFP®

In a world of uncertainty, U.S. Treasury bonds continue to shine. Learn why they remain the bedrock of portfolio safety—offering unmatched liquidity, global demand, and downside protection.

Investing

Opinion: With the market a mess, the stock pickers are back

ArticleApril 30, 2025By Dougal Williams, CFA

With U.S. stock prices down and volatility up, some suggest it’s time for stock pickers to shine. But does the evidence support the claim?

Events

April 17, 2025: (Webinar) What today’s markets mean for investors

In this webinar, we share our perspectives on what’s driving markets, how we’re responding, and what this means for your portfolio and financial plan.

Subscribe to agenda-free news, tips, and analysis, delivered to your inbox each month.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
  • Legal Disclosures
  • Form CRS
  • Client Portal
  • Our company
  • Community
  • Vista news and events
  • Legal Disclosures
  • Form CRS
  • Client Portal
  • Our company
  • Community
  • Vista news and events
  • Legal Disclosures
  • Form CRS
  • Client Portal
  • Our company
  • Community
  • Vista news and events
Contact us
© Vista Capital Partners 2025
We use cookies to enhance your browsing experience, serve personalized ads or content, and analyze our traffic. By clicking "Accept", you consent to our use of cookies.AcceptRejectPrivacy Policy