Member-only story

Are You a Cat Investor or a Dog Investor?

Stephen Foerster
4 min readApr 2, 2021

The behavior of unrushed versus impulsive investors often mimics those of our pets

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

When I was a young boy we had a family pet, a Dalmatian named Gypsy, unique because she had only one spot, a patch over one of her eyes. My most vivid memory of Gypsy was the time she spotted six frozen uncooked hot dogs that my mother left on the countertop to thaw. Before anyone could react, Gypsy grabbed the hot dogs and wolfed them all down. Needless to say, Gypsy wasn’t feeling well for a while after that.

Today we share our family home with Jasper, a Siamese cat. Unfortunately, Jasper recently had an accident that required hip surgery and a leg cast. We’ve been giving her 24/7 attention and she is recovering nicely. Since she is less mobile than she was, my wife offered up her iPad for Jasper’s use, and we found an eight-hour video for cats on YouTube, mostly showing birds coming and going, and the occasional squirrel. Jasper loves it and sits quietly for hours watching the video.

It occurred to me that many investors are a lot like either Gypsy or Jasper, and the type of investor you are matter a lot. Let’s start with the dog investors. They have a short attention span. Whatever is currently in front of them catches their interest, the hot stocks of the moment. We’ve recently seen a lot of them, like GameStop, AMC, Blackberry, and…

--

--

Stephen Foerster
Stephen Foerster

Written by Stephen Foerster

I’m an award-winning author and Finance prof, CFA. I write stories about investing and investment history. (I don’t give financial advice.)

No responses yet