The best investors in the world are wrong -- a lot. Researchers Claire Flynn Levy and Lee Freeman-Shor spent over a decade studying elite money managers and found that being right about stock picks isn't actually what separates the winners. What separates them is what happens after the pick. The discipline, the rules, the willingness to act when the data changes -- and the ability to remove emotion from decisions most people make entirely on feeling.

What You'll Walk Away With


  Why top investors can be wrong more than half the time and still dramatically outperform -- and what that means for how you evaluate your own strategy

  The critical shift from obsessing over what to buy to building a repeatable process around what you do next

  Three behavioral tribes investors fall into when a position moves against them -- and which one quietly destroys long-term returns

  Two distinct ways investors handle winning positions -- and why the more comfortable approach tends to leave serious money on the table

  How elite investors use predefined rules to decide when to sell, trim, or hold -- and why removing emotion from that decision is the whole game

  A real-world example of a rules-based system built around earnings surprises and data-driven holding periods -- one you can actually learn from

  Why planting tiny "seed" positions can preserve massive upside while keeping risk almost invisible on the downside

  The hidden cost of a pattern so common it barely registers -- holding losers too long while cutting winners too early

  What makes China's market behave unlike anywhere else -- and how one maestro built an entire strategy around it

  The AI cautionary tale hiding inside this episode -- a real advisor, a real client presentation, and math that was off by a factor of 12


Why This Matters Now

For investors in their 40s, the goal quietly shifts. Finding the next big winner starts to matter less than building something that actually holds up over time. Markets feel noisier, AI tools feel more powerful, and the promise of faster answers has never been louder. But long-term results still come down to behavior, discipline, and repeatable systems -- the same unglamorous edge the pros have been using all along. Knowing that changes how you listen to the noise.

From the Basement

Joe and OG press Claire and Lee on what a decade of studying elite investors actually reveals -- and the answers are more behavioral than most people expect. The crew then turns to AI in financial advice, and OG shares a story that should give every advisor and DIY investor pause before they hit send on anything they haven't personally verified. Doug arrives with a trivia question that somehow connects Michael Jackson's moonwalk to one giant leap for your bragging rights. Whether the basement scoreboard sticks the landing is best discovered with your earbuds in.




FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/diving-deep-into-stock-market-research-1820

Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201

Enjoy!




Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Stacking Benjamins Show

StackingBenjamins.com | Money Podcast | Cumulus Podcast Network

Even the Pros Are Wrong Half the Time. Here's What They Do Differently SB1820

MAR 25, 202669 MIN
The Stacking Benjamins Show

Even the Pros Are Wrong Half the Time. Here's What They Do Differently SB1820

MAR 25, 202669 MIN

Description

The best investors in the world are wrong -- a lot. Researchers Claire Flynn Levy and Lee Freeman-Shor spent over a decade studying elite money managers and found that being right about stock picks isn't actually what separates the winners. What separates them is what happens after the pick. The discipline, the rules, the willingness to act when the data changes -- and the ability to remove emotion from decisions most people make entirely on feeling. What You'll Walk Away With Why top investors can be wrong more than half the time and still dramatically outperform -- and what that means for how you evaluate your own strategy The critical shift from obsessing over what to buy to building a repeatable process around what you do next Three behavioral tribes investors fall into when a position moves against them -- and which one quietly destroys long-term returns Two distinct ways investors handle winning positions -- and why the more comfortable approach tends to leave serious money on the table How elite investors use predefined rules to decide when to sell, trim, or hold -- and why removing emotion from that decision is the whole game A real-world example of a rules-based system built around earnings surprises and data-driven holding periods -- one you can actually learn from Why planting tiny "seed" positions can preserve massive upside while keeping risk almost invisible on the downside The hidden cost of a pattern so common it barely registers -- holding losers too long while cutting winners too early What makes China's market behave unlike anywhere else -- and how one maestro built an entire strategy around it The AI cautionary tale hiding inside this episode -- a real advisor, a real client presentation, and math that was off by a factor of 12 Why This Matters Now For investors in their 40s, the goal quietly shifts. Finding the next big winner starts to matter less than building something that actually holds up over time. Markets feel noisier, AI tools feel more powerful, and the promise of faster answers has never been louder. But long-term results still come down to behavior, discipline, and repeatable systems -- the same unglamorous edge the pros have been using all along. Knowing that changes how you listen to the noise. From the Basement Joe and OG press Claire and Lee on what a decade of studying elite investors actually reveals -- and the answers are more behavioral than most people expect. The crew then turns to AI in financial advice, and OG shares a story that should give every advisor and DIY investor pause before they hit send on anything they haven't personally verified. Doug arrives with a trivia question that somehow connects Michael Jackson's moonwalk to one giant leap for your bragging rights. Whether the basement scoreboard sticks the landing is best discovered with your earbuds in. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/diving-deep-into-stock-market-research-1820 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices