undervalued Posted April 21, 2017 Share Posted April 21, 2017 Can someone describe their experiences about using decision trees when making their investments and how often do you use it? A link to an example also works or a Coursera course or text book or link to a college course, etc. Thank you in advance Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StubbleJumper Posted April 21, 2017 Share Posted April 21, 2017 Too complicated. Borrowing from Monish Pabrai, there's really a very simple decision tree: Heads I win, Tails I don't lose very much. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SharperDingaan Posted April 22, 2017 Share Posted April 22, 2017 We do a very simple decision tree every quarter, on everything we own, over a 6 month horizon. Up, down, no change with a simple P(x) to each; no values, and trend over time. It makes you more aware of the volatility associated with your hold decision, and sets you up for hedging. See a significant decline since the last quarter? maybe its time to lighten up by 50%. SD Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
InspireByReason Posted April 22, 2017 Share Posted April 22, 2017 We do a very simple decision tree every quarter, on everything we own, over a 6 month horizon. Up, down, no change with a simple P(x) to each; no values, and trend over time. It makes you more aware of the volatility associated with your hold decision, and sets you up for hedging. See a significant decline since the last quarter? maybe its time to lighten up by 50%. SD This is such a strange practice. Why would you sell something at a lower price? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SharperDingaan Posted April 22, 2017 Share Posted April 22, 2017 We do a very simple decision tree every quarter, on everything we own, over a 6 month horizon. Up, down, no change with a simple P(x) to each; no values, and trend over time. It makes you more aware of the volatility associated with your hold decision, and sets you up for hedging. See a significant decline since the last quarter? maybe its time to lighten up by 50%. SD This is such a strange practice. Why would you sell something at a lower price? Last quarter I assess XYZ's prospects 6 months out as 30% higher, 50% no change, and 20% lower; net impact (30% positive - 20% negative) is +10% higher. This quarter I think its 40% higher, 40% no change, and 20% lower; net impact is +20% higher, trending +10%: hold. Instead I assess at 20% higher, 40% no change, and 40% lower; net impact is -20% lower, trending -30%; sell 50% & repurchase later (hedge). 3 months from now we reassess again; the net impact is now -10% lower, trending +10%; buy in the short. If we're right, we have our original position back + a short gain. As measurement periods are not fixed, & you need P(x) judgements; you pretty much have to do it in your head as well. SD Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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