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Lessons from Those Who
Predicted the Housing Bubble - and from Those Who Didn't.
by Dov Gordon
A
New York Times article (March 2nd, 2008) titled
“How
a Bubble Stayed Under the Radar” by Robert J. Shiller, tries
to answer the puzzle of why “…most experts didn’t recognize the
[housing] bubble as it was forming?”
Shiller suggests that the reason
consumers continued to bid up home prices and didn’t recognize that
prices were inflated was due to the impossibility of any single player
having all the information. So even if an individual
suspected that homes were overpriced, he was very likely to have passed
on his own judgment for that of the masses. He relies on a
model called the “information cascade” which shows that “more
than one-third of the time, rational individuals, each given
information that is 60 percent accurate, will reach the wrong
collective conclusion.”
“…If
people could somehow hold a national town meeting and share their
independent information, they would have the opportunity to see the
full weight of the evidence. Any individual errors would be averaged
out, and the participants would collectively reach the correct
decision.” In other words, if only we had all the information
we could make better decisions.
Well,
maybe. But in real life we often need to make decisions with
incomplete information. So what to do?
Yet,
there were those who did predict the housing bubble so
if we can reconstruct their thinking, it should be helpful. In
the May 2006 issue of Harpers, Michael Hudson analyzed “the coming real
estate collapse” more than a year before the crumble.
My
friend Stever Robbins
summarized
Hudson nicely on his blog back on April 28th,
2006:
“…Banks
are writing more and more mortgages on inflated house prices to people
who don’t make enough to pay off the loans. People are paying
interest-only loans or even partial-interest loans, so they are never
building any equity. If prices level out or fall, those people are
doomed. They can’t sell the house for enough to repay the loan. So
they’re stuck. If interest rates go up, then they can’t make their
monthly payments either, and their only recourse is bankruptcy. If this
happens enough, the banks are screwed because they lose the money they
loaned.”
Stever
proceeded to lay out an insightful, logical and sadly correct
conclusion about the direction of the housing market and the resulting
impact on the banking system.
Did
Hudson and Robbins have more information
than Fed chairman Alan Greenspan who “would tell audiences that we were
facing not a bubble but a froth — lots of small local bubbles that
never grew to a scale that could threaten the health of the overall
economy.” Certainly not.
Making
good decisions and recognizing trends isn’t a function of having all
the information
–
as if such a thing were possible. It’s a function of
understanding the information you have; of recognizing what information
is significant and what is incidental. Poor decisions are
usually caused by inflating the importance of the wrong details and
brushing aside what really matters.
When
studying the housing market, which information really
matters? What factors are driving all the others?
What makes the mortgage industry tick?
By
taking a broader view, by expanding what we pay attention to, we notice
that consumers can’t bid up a house without the backing of a
bank. If we then look at the publicly available information
on the banks, we might start to notice, as Hudson did, that banks are
writing more and more loans to people who can’t afford them.
We might notice that loan defaults are on the rise, but banks are
allocating for fewer and fewer.
My
point is that to accurately predict trends and make good choices, we
don’t need all of the information, but we need to pay attention to the
RIGHT information and give it its proper weight. You do this
by asking smart questions that broaden the scope of what you are paying
attention to. You ask questions that help you draw hypotheses
about causality and project forward.
Being
smart doesn’t ensure good judgment. Good judgment also
requires clear and disciplined thinking. In a future article we’ll take
a closer look at these kinds of thinking skills. For now,
consider these questions below…
DOV GORDON’s CEO THOUGHT-PROVOKER™ SUMMARY:
-
What
factors, trends or information has been playing a key role in your
company’s decision making during the past year or two. What
might cause those factors to be more or less relevant in the future?
-
The
converse: What factors have you been downplaying but which
might deserve renewed consideration?
-
Since
the current trajectory can’t continue forever, what are three or four
possible future scenarios and how can your company leverage each should
they in fact develop?
-
What
is the uniform decision making process followed throughout your
organization? Does one exist? Does it force
objectivity over wishful thinking? Does it ensure decisions
are made in line with your company’s strategy?
===========
DOV
GORDON
helps senior executives make better, wiser decisions and quickly get
things done. He is sought after for his perspective and
advice on formulating and implementing strategy, developing an
innovation culture and cultivating superior team work. Dov
can be reached via his websites
www.GordonGroupEC.com
and
www.Superior-Strategy.com
or via email at
dovgordon@gmail.com.
Archives of The CEO Thought-Provoker™ are
here:
http://www.gordongroupec.com/articles.html
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Dov
Gordon
helps senior
executives at small and mid-sized companies around the world to earn
the respect and admiration of their marketplace. Clients
benefit from clarifying their strategies, sharpening their focus,
better decision making, improved teamwork and growing into great
leaders.
Management and
Strategy Consulting.
Executive
Coaching.
+++++++++
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Copyright 2008
© by Dov Gordon. All rights reserved.
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