Table of Contents

Performance Chasing

The 30-Second Summary

What is Performance Chasing? A Plain English Definition

Imagine you are driving a car down a long, winding country road. Instead of looking forward through the windshield to see the twists, turns, and potential obstacles ahead, you decide to navigate by looking exclusively in your rearview mirror. You see a beautiful, smooth, straight stretch of road behind you and conclude that the road ahead must be identical. You press your foot on the accelerator, confident in the path you've already traveled. This is, in essence, performance chasing. It's the investment equivalent of driving by staring at the past. Performance chasing is the deeply ingrained human tendency to pour money into a stock, mutual fund, or any other asset for one simple reason: it has performed spectacularly well in the recent past. The chaser sees a stock chart that goes from the bottom left to the top right and feels an irresistible pull. This pull isn't based on a careful study of the company's balance sheet, its competitive position, or its management team. It's based on two of the most powerful and destructive emotions in finance: greed and fear.

The performance chaser isn't buying a piece of a business; they are buying a lottery ticket that seems to have already paid out for others. They are not investing, they are speculating on the hope that a trend will continue indefinitely. A value investor, by contrast, acts like a responsible driver. They may glance in the rearview mirror, but their focus is firmly on the road ahead—analyzing the business (the terrain), estimating its true worth (the destination), and ensuring they pay a price that protects them from unexpected potholes (the margin of safety).

“The investor's chief problem—and even his worst enemy—is likely to be himself.” - Benjamin Graham

This quote from the father of value investing perfectly captures the essence of the problem. Performance chasing isn't an issue with financial models; it's an issue with human psychology. It’s the triumph of herd instinct over independent thought.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

For a value investor, understanding performance chasing isn't just an academic exercise; it is fundamental to survival and success. The entire philosophy of value investing is structured to be a direct antidote to this destructive behavior. Here’s why it matters so profoundly.

In short, performance chasing is the siren song that lures investors onto the rocks of financial ruin. A value investor must lash themselves to the mast of discipline, analysis, and patience to sail past it safely.

How to Recognize and Avoid Performance Chasing

This concept is a behavioral flaw, not a financial metric to be calculated. Therefore, the practical application lies not in a formula, but in developing a mental toolkit and a disciplined process to act as a defense mechanism against this powerful instinct.

The Antidote: A Four-Step Defense

Here is a practical method to immunize yourself against the allure of chasing hot returns.

  1. 1. The “So What?” Test: The next time you see a headline about a fund that returned 50% last year or a stock that has tripled in six months, your first, automatic response should be: “So what?”. Past performance is not indicative of future results; this is more than just a legal disclaimer, it is a fundamental market truth. The past return is a sunk fact. The only question that matters to an investor is: “Given its current price, what are its future prospects, and does it offer value today?” This simple question shifts your focus from the rearview mirror to the windshield.
  2. 2. Invert Your Search Process: As the great Charlie Munger advised, “Invert, always invert.” Instead of asking, “What is everyone buying? What is popular and hot?”, ask the opposite: “What is everyone selling? What is boring, neglected, or even hated?” While the crowd is chasing the high-fliers, value investors are rummaging through the bargain bin. This is the heart of contrarian_investing. You are far more likely to find a dollar bill selling for fifty cents in an unloved corner of the market than in a stock that has already been bid up to the stratosphere by a euphoric mob.
  3. 3. Build and Adhere to a Checklist: Emotions are the enemy of good investing. A checklist is the ultimate tool for enforcing rationality. Before you are allowed to buy any security, you must be able to tick off every box on your pre-defined list. Your checklist should include questions like:
    • Do I understand this business and how it makes money? Is it within my circle_of_competence?
    • Does it have a durable competitive advantage (a “moat”)?
    • Is the management team capable and trustworthy?
    • Is the balance sheet strong, with manageable debt?
    • Is the current stock price significantly below my conservative estimate of its intrinsic value?
    • Would I be happy to own this business if the stock market closed for the next five years?
  4. 4. Measure Process, Not Outcome: In the short term, the market is a voting machine, not a weighing machine. Your decision could be correct on the fundamentals, but the stock price might still go down. Conversely, you could make a foolish, speculative bet and get lucky. To avoid the trap of “resulting” (judging a decision's quality by its outcome), focus on your process. Did you follow your checklist? Did you do the research? Did you buy with a margin of safety? If you have a sound process, good outcomes will eventually follow. This frees you from the need for the instant gratification that performance chasers crave.

Interpreting the Warning Signs

Recognizing the symptoms of performance chasing in your own thoughts and actions is the first step to curing it. Be brutally honest with yourself. If you experience any of the following, a red flag should go up immediately:

A Practical Example

Let's travel back to the height of the dot-com bubble in late 1999. We'll follow two investors, Chasing Charlie and Prudent Penny, as they decide where to invest their capital.

The Scenario Chasing Charlie (The Performance Chaser) Prudent Penny (The Value Investor)
The Opportunity Charlie is mesmerized by a company called PetsAndPixels.com. It's an online pet food retailer that has no profits and is burning through cash, but its stock has risen an astonishing 1,200% in the past year. Penny is researching Steady Staplers Inc., a profitable, 50-year-old manufacturer of office supplies. The business grows at a modest 4% per year, and its stock has been flat for two years as investors flock to exciting tech stocks.
The “Analysis” He sees the stock chart. He hears his friends bragging about their gains. The news proclaims a “new paradigm” where profits don't matter. His analysis consists of the price trend and his fear of being left behind. Penny reads ten years of annual reports. She sees that Steady Staplers has a strong brand, consistent profits, a healthy balance sheet, and a history of returning cash to shareholders via dividends. She calculates its intrinsic value to be around $30 per share.
The Decision Charlie, swept up in the euphoria, invests his entire retirement fund into PetsAndPixels.com at $150 per share, near its all-time high. He feels brilliant and part of the future. The market, bored with Steady Staplers, is selling it for just $15 per share. Penny sees a 50% margin of safety ($15 price vs. $30 value) and invests a significant portion of her portfolio. She knows she might have to be patient.
The Outcome (2001) The dot-com bubble bursts. PetsAndPixels.com, having never made a profit, declares bankruptcy. Its stock goes to $0. Charlie's retirement fund is wiped out. He bought at the point of maximum risk and paid the ultimate price. The recession hits, but people still need staplers. Steady Staplers' earnings dip slightly but remain positive. As the market returns to sanity, investors recognize its stable value. The stock price climbs to $28 per share over the next two years, nearly doubling Penny's investment while the rest of the market is in ruins.

This simplified example illustrates the core difference. Charlie chased the past, was driven by emotion, and ignored value. Penny focused on the future business prospects, was driven by rational analysis, and demanded a significant margin of safety. One strategy leads to ruin; the other leads to sustainable wealth.

Advantages and Limitations

It's difficult to speak of “advantages” for a behavior that is so detrimental to an investor's health. However, it's crucial to understand the psychological “rewards” or lures that make it so common.

"Strengths" (The Psychological Lure)

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls