Quote:
Originally Posted by sleepyjeff
Darn, I was hoping.
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Here's the key difference: in your example, everything about the system is known. Values can be assigned rationally. The only question then is risk aversion.
In your example you have 5,000 boxes, 4,900 of which contain $1MM. You may not be willing to
pay $980,000 for a box because the risk is too big but there is also no reason for the person with the boxes to sell them for less than $980,000 because he would then be losing money. He has $4.9 billion dollars in cash, why would he sell it for less than $4.9 billion? Heck, why would he sell it for even exactly $4.9 billion; it wouldn't be worth his trouble. So he has to find people who are simply willing to
gamble on the outcome and pay
more than $980,000 for a chance at a box that contains $1 million. This is how the lotter works? If the jackpot on the lottery is $1 million the expected value of a single ticket is $0.055 (5.5 cents). So they go out and find people willing to pay a lot more ($1) than the value for the
chance of a huge return (but the vast majority lose their dollar).
Investing is not this kind of system. You aren't looking at absolute odds and making a risk decision, you are guessing at the odds and making a compounded risk decision (the risk that your guess on the odds is wrong and then the risk that you lose as well). It is a fundamentally different type of uncertainty than you face at a roulette wheel.
Essentially, rather than being told "we've spread $4.9 billion in $1MM increments through 5,000 boxes" it is "we're asking you to buy one of our 5,000 boxes. We suspect that most of them contain $1MM but we aren't certain of that. We've been told, but can't confirm, that there is at least $4.9 billion in our boxes but we aren't sure how many boxes there are, it could be 5 or it could be 5 billion. How much would you pay for a box?"
Now, obviously, real investing isn't that random and ideally there are well informed decisions with all of the information laid out. What has been revealed over the last two years is not that there are 32 slots on the roulette wheel and you have to pick one, but rather than the people playing the game didn't actually know how many slots were in the wheel.