Watch What They Do…

Investors are telling pollsters one thing but doing something very different in terms of their portfolio allocations.  I dropped a guest post on CNBC today that illuminates what's really going on.

Enjoy!

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Brown: Watch What Investors Do, Not What They Say

I'm going to let you in on a few little secrets about investor sentiment polls:

  • They're only consequential at extreme readings.
  • They're useless in the absence of other data.
  • They often conflict with other sentiment polls taken at the same exact time.

But by far the most important thing you need to understand when presented with sentiment studies is that people tend to answer these things in alignment with who they want to be rather than who they really are.

In polls, as in real life, the profligate spender wants to convince himself and others that he is miserly, the most reckless wish to outwardly convey a sense of prudence, and so on.

With that in mind, two articles that came out last week purport to give us a read on what the individual investor is up to at this juncture. They are highly contradictory, a textbook case of the investor class saying one thing and then doing another.

Read the rest:

Watch What Investors Do, Not What They Say (CNBC)

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