Previous World Series poker champ Annie Duke says poker can teach you a lot about investing, especially when it's time to make quick decisions (1).
"The key skill isn't certainty. It's making good decisions under uncertainty and then changing your mind quickly when new information arrives," Duke told Market Watch.
Since becoming a world champion poker player, Duke has pivoted into investment consulting. She works as a decision strategist for everyone from individual investors to venture capital firms (2).
Here are some of the mistakes she says bad investors make regularly and what good investors do differently.
Don't confuse good results with good decision-making
Beginner investors frequently base their investing decisions on other people's portfolios, seeking out people who have recently posted big returns. Duke said that can lead you down the wrong path.
"A large return in isolation should actually make you suspicious. It usually means high volatility, which means a lot of the result was luck," she said.
She calls the tendency to assume a good outcome "resulting," adding that it's common throughout the investing world. And she uses Zoom as an example.
"Someone invested in Zoom in 2019 and made a fortune when the pandemic hit. They may have had a legitimate thesis about video conferencing's future. But they did not forecast a global pandemic," She said. "Taking full credit for that outcome is resulting. It wasn't their decision; it was an act of luck."
Sébastien Page of the CFA Institute admits that luck can inflate your short-term investment gains, leading investors to think their investment strategy is working when it isn't (3). He added that "cultivating self-awareness" is key to long-term success.
"Focus on your decision-making process rather than outcomes. When you're winning, remember that luck may be involved," he said. "If you miss your target, don't beat yourself up."
Duke recommended writing down your investment reasoning before you invest. That way, no matter the outcome, you can look back on your thinking and figure out where you went right or wrong.
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Duke's three steps to market uncertainty
In an uncertain or "frothy" market, it can be hard to determine whether stocks are about to crash. Duke suggested looking at past trends to help guide your decision.
"The starting point is what I like to call the base rate. What has historically happened in situations like this one?" she said. "That tells you whether things look normal or whether you're in territory that has preceded corrections before."
For example, investing based on headlines might have you go all-in on AI company stocks. But base rates could suggest OpenAI's projected revenue goals for the next five years are unrealistic, indicating the company could underperform (4).
Once you have a historical reference point, Duke says investors should focus on the present. Ask yourself what's different now compared with then. Is there something about the current market that makes it different enough from past examples to suggest a different outcome?
With OpenAI, for example, you could argue that AI has grown so rapidly in recent years that it cannot reasonably be compared with historical growth.
The final step is to look ahead.
"Imagine you were wrong," Duke said. "If it turns out this was just like every other cycle, what were the early signals you probably ignored?"
Writing down those guesses can help investors prepare a plan in case those warning signs pop up down the line.
Article Sources
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MarketWatch (1); Annie Duke (2); CFA Institute (3); Morgan Stanley (4)
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Kit Pulliam is a DC-based financial journalist with over five years of experience writing, editing, and fact-checking financial content.
