Overconfidence Bias

Excessive faith in one's own knowledge, predictions, and abilities in financial decision-making.

Behavioral Finance

Definition

Overconfidence manifests as overestimating one's ability to pick stocks, time markets, or assess risks. It leads to excessive trading (which reduces returns by 3-7% annually per Barber/Odean), concentrated portfolios, underestimation of risk, and failure to diversify. Studies show that 75% of fund managers believe they are above average—a mathematical impossibility.

lightbulb Example

An overconfident trader with a 5-trade winning streak increases position sizes and reduces stop losses, believing their "edge" is growing. The next trade—twice the normal size with a tight stop—hits the stop immediately, wiping out the previous five gains.

verified_user Key Points

  • Overestimate ability to predict and control outcomes
  • Leads to excessive trading (3-7% annual return drag)
  • Concentrated portfolios from misplaced conviction
  • 75% of managers believe they are above average

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