Gert Scholtz

7 years ago · 2 min. reading time · ~10 ·

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Framing the Frame

Framing the Frame

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Jim Murray took my original clanky post on Framing, and reworked it to his flowing and superb style of narrative. Thank you Jim. Here is the reworked version:

Behavioral economics is the study of decision making in an economic and financial context.

Daniel Kahneman is one of the leading thinkers in the field. He is the only psychologist to have won the Nobel Prize for Economics. In his study of the process of decision making, he identified various ‘decision biases’ we are prone too.

Key among them is the propensity to be influenced by something called The Framing Effect.

Framing effects can occur where a decision is based on one set of facts which can be stated in different, but logically similar ways.

A simple example is that of the ‘glass half full’ versus the ‘glass half empty’. Both of these constructs say the same thing, but in different ways.

Another example would be the contrast between some event having a 10% chance of failure versus that same event having a 90% chance of success. Same event. Two different ways of looking at it or framing it.


The Framing Effect In Financial, Economic & Domestic Decision Making

We make financial and economic decisions within a certain context or frame, and if the frame should be different, our choices may be different as well.

Here are some of the findings behavioral researchers have discovered about The Framing Effect:

  • In the Retail World: Many consumers would rather buy a product that is advertised as ‘Buy One, Get One Free’ as opposed to purchasing the same two items at a 50% discount.
  • In the Stock Market: In the most common form of a share split, a share of $80 would split into two shares of $40 each. Researchers found that often there is a perception of increased value created when companies split their shares. For example, when Yahoo announced their share split, the share price surged by16% the next day.
  • In The Investment World: If you risk 1% of your investment portfolio in a single share that goes to zero, you will probably be more upset than if your investment portfolio were to lose 1% of its total value.
  • In Business In General: You might be far more inclined to take a risk if you were told you have a ‘one in six’ chance of succeeding, as opposed to being told that you had a 17% chance of success. If it was further stated that you have 83% chance of failing, you probably wouldn’t even think about it. All three state the same scenario. All that is different it how the statements are framed.
  • In The Employment World: Many people would happier with a 10% salary raise when inflation is at 5%, than they would be with a 7% raise when inflation is at 0%. A 10% raise just feels and looks better, yet what really matters is the increase in actual spending power, which is much greater in the 7% to 0% case.
  • In Everyday Life: One group of people are told that ground beef is ‘75% lean’ while another group are told that the same beef is ‘25% fat’. The ‘fat beef’ group percieved that their beef was much lower in quality and taste than the lean beef group.


Can We Avoid The Framing Effect When Making Decisions?

Charles Munger, the long-time business partner of Warren Buffett, had this to say:

“It is in the nature of things that many hard problems

are best solved only when they are addressed backward”.


In other words invert the frame.

If someone claims product has a 75% success rate, invert the claim by addressing it from the back-end. To wit: There is a 25% failure rate. Then ask yourself if you should purchase it.

Another way is to relate a percentage decision to absolute numbers. I have a 25% chance of succeeding which means that one time out of four I will succeed.

To make more balanced economic decisions; see the frame, invert the-frame, look at both and then decide.






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Comments

Dean Owen

7 years ago #21

I have to be honest, the original version has a better flow.

Milos Djukic

7 years ago #20

You are welcome Gert Scholtz is a really good.

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #19

Javier C\u00e1mara Rica. Thank you Jim!

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #18

#21
Phil Friedman Thank you for your detailed comments Phil. The way I look at it: The intrinsic value of a share, as based on asset value of the company and / or expected future cash flows, is a constant at the time of a share split and it would be illogical to ascribe a higher value based only on the intrinsic value at the time of the share split. However, a share split does result in the share being more tradeable and more liquid, and this may well result in an increase in perceived value. So yes, the reference in the article is not totally correct. Thanks for reading and have a great day!

Phil Friedman

7 years ago #17

Gert Scholtz, to my mind, this is a major problem in the behavioral sciences, including empirical economics. Namely, very simple rational analysis is often overlooked. To wit, you say, "In the most common form of share split, one share is replaced by two, each with halve the value of the original share, yet together still the same value. For example a share of $80 would split into two shares of $40 each. Often there is a perception of increased value created when companies split their shares. Yahoo announced their share split and the share price surged 16% the next day." There is nothing surprising or noteworthy about this. The mistake being made is in ASSUMING that the perceived value of a stock in as a share of something real, for example, the assets of the company. The fact is that nowadays the stock market is nothing more nor less than a parimutuel betting window. When a stock is split, everyone PERCEIVES that the total value of each pair of resulting shares is greater than the immediately prior value of a single pre-split share, NOT because they think the inherent value of the share has increased, but because they expect that post-split the shares will almost immediately begin to appreciate -- which is born out by the Yahoo example you give. That the author you refer to is simply mistaken when he implies that the perceived of the split shares accrue to the shares, when in fact, it accrues to the perceived greater potential for short term appreciation. Otherwise some good points covered and made. Nice piece, Thank you for sharing. Cheers!

Sara Jacobovici

7 years ago #16

Thanks gentlemen (just in case you don't know who you are, I am referring to Gert Scholtz) for making me smile a few times. I've never smiled and scrolled up at the same time before.

Kevin Pashuk

7 years ago #15

#18
OK... you win with that one Gert Scholtz

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #14

Ken Boddie The psychologist says to the glass: tell me how you feel about the engineer :)

Kevin Pashuk

7 years ago #13

#16
and the opportunist takes the glass and drinks the contents while the other three are arguing.

Ken Boddie

7 years ago #12

OK Gert Scholtz, since we're on the subjects of psychology, marketing and engineers, let's look at how we can psycho-analyse a glass of water. The optimist says it's half full, the pessimist says it's half empty, and the engineer says it's twice the size for which it should have been designed. 🤓

Kevin Pashuk

7 years ago #11

#13
Pyscho engineers Ken Boddie? Never met one... although a few have tried to pass themselves off as civil...

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #10

Ken Boddie So even engineers have a marketing side! And they play mind games as Irene said? NO! :) Thank Ken for the extra "angle" on the buzz. Thanks for reading and commenting Irene.

Ken Boddie

7 years ago #9

Interesting 'psychonomical' precis, Gert Scholtz. Engineers have been designing road pavements on a similar principle for decades. Pavements, for example, all fail, due to repeat loading and associated material fatigue or differential strain accumulation. This is unfortunately inevitable and all pavements have a finite life, estimated as part of the design process, after which they will require some form of remediation or reconstruction. This concept is invariably sold positively, whereby designing on a 95 percentile basis (rather than say 90 percentile or 80 percentile) is most often described as a 95% chance of exceeding the estimated design life, rather than a 5% chance that failure will occur before the anticipated design life. Perhaps this might also explain why there are so many psycho engineers running around out there? 😰

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #8

Dean Owen Thank you Dean. Always good to have your comments and shares my friend!

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #7

#4
Thanks for reading and commenting Brian. Spotting the upside in the downside sums up your approach?

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #6

Savvy Raj Thank you Savvy - I like your phrase: fodder for thought.

Sara Jacobovici

7 years ago #5

Gert Scholtz makes a lot of sense here. An important read.

Sara Jacobovici

7 years ago #4

Great Buzz Gert Scholtz. Makes a lot of "sense"; how you see things depends on how you hear things.

Dean Owen

7 years ago #3

I couldn't help but think of LinkedIn with their 100 million active users, which sure sounds better than 300 million inactive users, or 25% active users. In the end, I'm sure they will just go with 400 million users. Great buzz my friend.

Gert Scholtz

7 years ago #2

Kevin Pashuk Glad you find it useful Kevin and thanks for reading.

Kevin Pashuk

7 years ago #1

A most excellent article to ponder and apply Gert Scholtz. I have a conversation tomorrow where I may be able to use these examples.

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