HomeNewsBusinessMarketsHeads - I was right, Tails - world was wrong. Devina Mehra explains self-attribution bias in stock investing

Heads - I was right, Tails - world was wrong. Devina Mehra explains self-attribution bias in stock investing

Investing, like most things in the world, is a game of luck cum skill but in the real world investors weigh the two differently depending on how well they have done recently.

August 16, 2021 / 13:06 IST
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Last week, I was watching Rajiv Bajaj's interview where he mentioned going to the village where his grandfather, Jamnalal Bajaj, was born. The latter was born in a poor family and once while playing outside was seen by a wealthy Sethji and adopted (for details of how that happened, you have to see the interview).

On that trip, he also met an employee - a security guard at Bajaj Auto - whose home was also in the same village, and at that time it struck Rajiv Bajaj that he had made up so many stories about the reasons for his success like his hard work, skills as an engineer and a manager and so on, but really if it had been that guard's grandfather playing outside on that fateful day, maybe that guard would have been the owner of Bajaj Auto and Rajiv would have been the guard!

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This was a moment of epiphany for him and showed him the fallacy in attributing success to his personal qualities and efforts when luck or destiny had played a crucial role, too.

This is a lesson that is awfully hard for human beings to learn as it is related to one of our inbuilt cognitive biases: the Self-attribution bias.