How Women Invest Differently Than Men
by Jason Zweig
Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Fess up, fellows: The masters of the universe have turned out to be masters of 
disaster. No matter which aspect of the financial crisis you consider, there is 
a man behind it.

So, it is worth pointing out how different things might be if the financial 
world were female.

Finance professors Brad Barber and Terrance Odean have found that women's 
risk-adjusted returns beat those of men by an average of about one percentage 
point annually. In short, women trade less frequently, hold less volatile 
portfolios and expect lower returns than men do.

On the other hand, in the testosterone-poisoned sandbox of the male investor, 
the most important thing is beating the other guy; the second most important: 
bragging about it. The long term is somebody else's problem, and asking for 
advice is an admission of inferiority. Worrying about risk is for sissies. 
Leverage is good, since it raises returns -- while the market goes up. Is it 
any wonder the male-dominated world of Wall Street has boomed and busted every 
few years for more than two centuries?

Women, by contrast, put safety first. Even after controlling for age, income 
and marital status, women are more inclined than men to wear seat belts, avoid 
cigarette smoking, floss and brush their teeth and get their blood pressure 
checked. They even have been shown to be 40% less prone than men to run yellow 
traffic lights.

Women are less afflicted than men by overconfidence, or the delusion that they 
know more than they really do. And they're more likely than men to attribute 
success to factors outside themselves, like luck or fate.

In 2001, a survey of financial analysts and investment advisers found that 
women felt it was much more important than men did to avoid incurring large 
losses, falling below a target rate of return and acting on incomplete 
information. In short, women are more risk-averse than men. And they shy away 
from uncertainty: Asked whether having ambiguous information would reduce their 
confidence and raise their perception of risk, 92% of the women said yes, 
versus just 69% of the men.

"There's a general emotional difference between men and women as they perceive 
and take risks," said Jennifer Lerner, a psychologist at Harvard University's 
John F. Kennedy School of Government.

Negative events like natural disasters, terrorist attacks or a financial crisis 
usually make men more angry than fearful. Women, on the other hand, tend to 
feel more fearful than angry.

Those differing emotions lead to divergent viewpoints. Seen through what Prof. 
Lerner calls "a lens of anger," the world seems more certain, more amenable to 
our control and less risky. Viewed through a lens of fear, however, the world 
appears full of uncertainty, beyond our control and rife with risk.

The results of a nationwide survey of hundreds of investors conducted in March, 
just days after the Dow bottomed at 6547, show how anger and fear in the minds 
of men and women can affect their financial decisions. Men were far more likely 
than women to say they were "more angry than fearful" about the financial 
crisis. And one in eight men, but only one in every 40 women, had "made riskier 
investments looking for long-term growth" in the previous week. Female 
investors were twice as likely to expect the return on stocks over the coming 
year to be zero or negative and to think stocks will return 5% or less per year 
over the next 10 years.

"The women were more concerned but took fewer actions," said psychologist Ellen 
Peters of the University of Oregon, who co-directed the survey. "They were also 
more pessimistic -- or realistic? -- about what to expect from the market."

Stocks are up 35% since March, so the women's fears haven't yet come to pass. 
But their inaction already looks wise. And their realism can't hurt, either. 
"The essential traits and qualities of the male," H.L. Mencken once wrote, "are 
at the same time the hall-marks of the numskull. ... Women, in fact, are the 
supreme realists of the race."

Memo to men: Your household's investment portfolio will be less risky and more 
diversified if your wife helps manage it. She will share in what comes out of 
that portfolio down the road; shouldn't she share in what goes into it? Chances 
are, her ideas and emotions will complement yours, and you will both end up 
wealthier. At least one of you will end up wiser.


Kirim email ke