| The
Stockholm Syndrome and the Market
By Todd Hickman
July 22, 2003 |
|
"In 1973, four Swedes were held captive in a bank vault
for six days during a robbery. Even though the captives themselves
were not able to explain it, they displayed a strange association
with their captors, identifying with them while fearing those
who sought to end their captivity. In some cases they later testified
on behalf of or raised money for the legal defense of their captors
This phenomenon has been dubbed the Stockholm syndrome.
According to the theory of psychologists, the abused seem to bond
to their abusers as a means to endure abuse."
-
Psychological Responses to Terrorism by Rev. Fr. Charles
T. Brusca
Since March 2000, many investors have found themselves victims
of abuse. This April ten of the nation's top investment firms
settled enforcement actions involving conflicts of interest between
research and investment banking. The enforcement actions allege
that, from approximately mid-1999 through mid-2001 or later, all
of the firms allowed inappropriate influence by investment banking
over research analysts, thereby creating conflicts of interest.
The ten firms are a who's who of brokerage and investment banking:
Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc.; Credit Suisse First Boston LLC;
Goldman, Sachs & Co.; Lehman Brothers Inc. ; J.P. Morgan Securities
Inc. ; Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Incorporated;
Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated; Citigroup Global Markets
Inc. f/k/a Salomon Smith Barney Inc.; UBS Warburg LLC; U.S. Bancorp
Piper Jaffray Inc.
Charges included:
- Issuing fraudulent research reports
- Research reports without a sound basis for evaluating facts,
containing exaggerated or unwarranted claims about the covered
companies
- Receiving payments for research without disclosing such payments
and making undisclosed payments for research
- Inappropriate spinning of "hot" Initial Public Offering (IPO)
allocations in violation of Self Regulatory Organization rules
- Violating broker-dealer record-keeping provisions
Curiously, however, investors do not blame brokerage firms for
poor performance in recommended stocks. The Stockholm Syndrome
gives us insight. According to Brusca:
"With this syndrome the captive seeks to distance himself
emotionally from the situation by denial that it is actually taking
place. The captive perceives it as "make believe", or looses himself
in excessive periods of sleep, or in delusions of being magically
rescued. He may try to forget the situation by engaging in useless
but time consuming "busy work". Depending on his degree
of identification with the captor he may deny that the captor
is at fault, holding that the would-be rescuers are really to
blame for his situation. "
Are you hurrying to rush to the defense of your broker? Perhaps
it was just all a bad dream? Perhaps if you study enough you might
find a way to distract yourself from the main issue?
It has become apparent, now more than ever, that passive indexing
and the usage of ETFs can be an answer to a scheme that has been
so adeptly perpetrated on the American public. We have been led
to believe the idea that we have to "beat" the market.and
that we need the brokerage industry to do it.
It is a statistical fact year after year that approximately 80%
of all mutual fund managers do NOT beat the S&P 500. The principle
beneficiary year after year of this mega-mind control is the brokerage
industry. Regardless of which way it goes, trades get made.
If you didn't follow through on your promises in your business
how long would you remain in business? Do you think perhaps you
might be fired if you repeatedly didn't keep your promises? I
encourage investors to examine the choices available before they
decide to hire a money manager who makes promises of being smarter
than the market. Choose money managers that understand the virtues
of passive investing.
W. Todd Hickman is a Registered Financial Consultant
with Asset Growth Associates of Texas and has been in the financial
services industry since 1987. Mr. Hickman co-hosts the financial
call-in talk show "That's The Bottom Line" every Tuesday
evening on Clear Channel 560AM KLVI. You can learn more about
his radio program at the show's website http://bottomlineradio.net.
You can find out more about his firm at http://savemyretirement.com.
You can also reach him at his offices at (409) 840-6900.