The behavior gap is alive and well in Europe. Much like U.S. investors, our European counterparts make similar mistakes.
This shouldn’t be a surprise. Decisions around what fund take its past returns into account. Everyone does it to some degree. We want to make money so we look for funds with a history – however limited – of positive results. The behavior gap is a self inflicted cost of buying a fund after it performs well and selling after it performs poorly. Continue Reading…

Anytime volatility picks up or the market makes a big move higher or lower, investors should remember that the market sets prices based off of the collective wisdom and stupidity from millions of decisions.