Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Buying Insurance Policies and Investment Products

Let’s discuss some case studies here:

Case A:

Suppose I give you a choice to make of the 2 available options:

  1. A bet in which you will surely loose 50 Rs. (100% chance of loss)
  2. A bet with 25% chance of Loss of 200 Rs, and 75% chance of Zero Loss

Which one will you choose? Think about it carefully, before making your choice and before reading further.

Some people select choice 1, other select choice 2. What have you selected?

Well, 98% of the people select choice 2 – so if you have done so, Congratulations – you are with the majority. But is majority always right? No, not necessarily, and not always. The psychological reason why more people select option 2 is because there they see a 75% chance of Zero Loss. They believe that there is more chance of saving a loss (75%), and it is better than a sure (100%) chance of loss of 50 Rs. The first illusion that comes to mind is that it is wise to take a 75% chance, rather than a sure loss.

However, mathematics works in its own ways. If we take the VALUE of the above two choices, we have the following:

  1. 100% * (-50) = -50
  2. 25% * (-200) + 75%*(0) = -50

Basically, what this means is that both the options are exactly the same, as far as mathematics is concerned. If someone asks me how much I will be willing to pay for entering this bet, I’ll say 50 Rs for both.

However, our psychological biases force us to look only at the things that we perceive are good, not necessarily the once that are really good. We do not know how to value an investment or a product, the only thing we look at is who is offering the product (a reputed investment bank, fund house or insurance company), who all are talking about and taking the policy (our colleagues, friends, relatives, even agents and brokers) and how has the product done in the past. What we forget is that there MAY not be any relationship between the efficiency of the product with its popularity, and with its past results – like a Mutual Fund performing better in the past does not guarantee similar returns for a coming year in the future. We tend to base our judgments on these factors completely ignoring the realities.

Let me give you another set of options:

Case B:

Let’s say you own a motorbike which you really love. There is a 25% chance that your motorbike will meet an accident and will require repair cost of 200 Rs, while there is a 75% chance that the motorbike will not suffer any accident. So here are your two choices:

  1. Pay Insurance premium of Rs. 50 to avoid paying repair cost of your motorbike
  2. Suffer 200 Rs. loss to your motorbike repair cost (25% chance) or Zero Loss to your motorbike (75% chance)

Which one will you choose?

Again, as in the previous case explained in the beginning of this article, majority (98%) of the individuals choose to take option 1. Hardly a few will select option 2. The fact is both these options again value to the same price.

Now comes the most interesting part: Compare option 1 of Case A and Case B – are the 2 options any different? Option 1 of Case A mentions a sure loss of 50 Rs. while that of case 2 mentions paying an insurance premium. Are they two different? No – they are exactly the same. Similarly, option2 of case A and B are also exactly the same. Yet majority of individuals (including me) end up selecting option 2 for case A and option 1 for case B. The only difference in case A and case B is about the presentation. The same concept is presented in 2 different forms so we end up making 2 different choices. This shows how wrong we are in our perception.

Insurance policies are designed taking advantage of this psychological bias – we don’t see the reality, we end up taking our investment decisions on what is presented to us, not what we need or understand. The job is very well done by agents and brokers. They may not be aware of making profit calculations, or in judging whether this policy is good or bad for the customer, but they gradually become experts in taking advantage of psychological biases and mentioning about the circumstances in which we may need a particular policy. They initially start by telling you why this policy is good and what it can offer – slowly they move to inform you about clubbing the insurance policy with Equity investments, bond investments, regular income, education shield, accident cover, health insurance, tax savings, blah, blah, blah, blah - the list is endless. Rest of the ambience is created by our own wellwishers – colleagues, friends and relatives. They are these smart-alecs who first buy such policies, and then they start advocating about the intelligent investment they have made and also persuade others to do the same by buying the similar policy or make similar investments. In my previous company, there was one such real fanatic “trader”, who would go to such an extent of forcing people to start trading that he would sit with them individually and discuss with them for hours about how good it is to trade and real money is in trading only. He was even willing to schedule meetings with the brokerage firm agents to open trading accounts.

As salaried individuals or businessmen or doctors or other professionals, we find it difficult to devote time to understand these financial calculations. The interesting irony is that these financial decisions are made to secure our future financially – and while buying such products we are the least bothered about the nitty-gritty. Ultimately, it’s human nature – the only thing that can be done is to educate ourselves and use some more presence of mind. We work so hard to earn our money – we leave our money decisions to agents and well-wishers! We get trapped with what is presented and ignore what is right and what we want.

Here’s another common example:

A person will drive in his car for 12 Kms. to buy a DVD Player which was initially priced at 25$ and now being sold at a discounted price of 15$ - he will buy the DVD player that he does NOT want – but is more interested in saving 10$. However, the same person will not purchase a winter coat (that he may really need) available in his neighboring shop for 300$ offering a discount of 10$. The problem is with the so-called “Reference Point”. A 10$ discount on 25$ value looks more in value for something that you don’t need, but the same 10$ discount on an item that you definitely need will not look worth on 300$ price. We tend to look at the percentage basis. 10$ on 25$ is 40% discount, while 10$ on 300$ is only 3.33%. People may already have a DVD player at home, but just because it is offered at a HIGH Reference point discount – they buy it – thinking that they will gift it to someone else or use it later. All that happens is that we end up buying something that we don’t need and avoid buying things that we really need.

However, from the point of view of the seller – he is offering a huge % discount on DVD player because something (15$) is better than nothing. The seller may know that a more advanced version of DVD player may be coming in the market very soon, so the current player will be made redundant. It’s better to sell it off at a lower profit (or even at a loss) to extract something, instead of dumping it in the godowns for no value.

This is exactly what goes on in the investment and insurance business. You become more prone to such marketing gimmicks. The insurance companies put up huge hoardings and place big adverts in the newspapers and television channels – all aimed at disguising the product to be excellent. We tend to ignore that this product may not even fit into our requirements, yet we end up buying them.

Very often I see a 50% discount on sale of 1 Kg. pack of cheese, butter and other dairy products in my local superstore. I’ve seen people blindly grabbing these big size packs of these products – while all they need is hardly 100 or 200 gms pack. The reason for sale is because the expiry date of these products is coming near. If no one will buy it, it will be a 100% loss for the seller. Sell it at 50% discount; atleast the seller gets 50% of the money. What really happens is that after purchasing the cheese in bulk, it may not be possible for the consumer’s family to consume it before the expiry date. A significant portion goes in the garbage bin, nullifying the entire discount. But we tend to buy impulsively – just concentrating on discount.

Another similar experience I had in Big Bazar. It was Saturday, and there was a lot of crowd in Big Bazar. Suddenly, a salesman rings a bell, and announces,” For exactly 1 hour from now, the shirts in this segment will be offered with Buy 2 get 2 Free offer. The offer will end in just 1 hour”. Immediately, people jumped into the shirts section. They were trying to locate the 4 shirts that they can buy – with a tension that they have only 1 hour to select and may be that the best shirts will not be available for long. All that happened was people ended up buying shirts that they didn’t really need, that too 4 of them. The price may have been discounted, but the sale of 4 shirts ensured that big bazaar managed to sell its products. Nothing but IMPULSE MARKETING.

The same goes on for selling insurance products and investment policies. We tend to take decisions instantaneously. We never take time to analyze and IPO or a NFO – just that the IPO or NFO is opened for 3-4 days, we pour in our money. Same goes for insurance policies which are sold at the financial year end –with the tax-saving keyword doing the magic (as I’ve explained in one of my previous articles).

Sometimes, the agents are even willing to give cash from the portion of their commission. Most of the times, these cash offers are made for policies that require a long term commitment from the investors. All that is required by the insurance company and the agent is that the policy should be sold, the customers should commit for a long term – that is what makes LIC the biggest player in the Indian stock market.

Continuing from the past 2 articles, I believe I’ve written enough against the agents :- ) The only thing I want to convey is understand the policy or product that you are buying. Learn to read the fine prints, try to understand whether it is what you really want or is it just going to be another impulsive purchase for you. An example I’d like to quote here is in the Comments section of my previous article. Please read the queries left by Shashi in the comments section for her policy and my detailed responses to it.

Keep visiting this blog for further content.

Please read the comments and post your views in the comment which helps in open discussion.

You may be interested in reading my previous articles. Here is the link to Table of Contents in a chronological order.



9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good article.Agree entirely with what you say.Three words when making insurance/investment decisions - Evaluate, evaluate and evaluate.If an agent says this is good for you, I'll only look at it as his job not permitting him to say it is not so good or a waste of money for me.

Amit Borkar said...

Hi,Thank You for the article.

Can you please give more info on ETF that you mentioned in last article.



Thanks.

Raghavendra Prasad Jakka said...

Hi

I totally agree with you.
An Investor should see how much he can benefit from that Product but not to a compnay or agent who are selling.Agents wil tell us how to enter into apolicy/investment but they will tell clearly how you can come out of that policy/investment when you don't wnat it after taking it.

Raghavendra
prasad.jr@gmail.com

Unknown said...

Let us read some more from the flip side of the coin. We have been reading plenty of what not to do and also why not to do. We will be grateful if you could suggest some smart investing strategies of how to go about investing and trading for persons coming from different age groups, like those who are just starting their earning careers or those who have just about 5-6 years of service life left or may be those persons retiring in 1-2 years/already retired but having capital paid to them through their PF/gratuity etc.

Anonymous said...

Just cant understand what's wrong with Miss Shashi...
There are people like her who are immediately looking for making money and investment strategies. She is continuously asking the same question again and again. Then there are also ppl like Vidisha, Rahul and Nickp2, who are silently reading all the articles and benefiting from them. It's great to see that Shobhit is patiently answering all the queries from Shashi, even devoting time to research on specific policies. Shobhit is also continously telling that the best places to invest are ETFs and IFs - but seems like Shashi is not able to get the point.
I'd like to advice Shashi to be a bit patient - rather than becoming too individualistic. I've been in the market for last 7-8 years and I know how little i know. It's better to learn about the products first rather than jump on the investments part. It's easy for you to make a comment like "We have seen enough of what not to do and why not to do". I dont think this kind of comments are anyway good. They may be taken as negative remarks by the author who is putting in so much effort. Repeatedly he is saying that it is impossible to make exceptional returns from the market, he is continously responding to each of your queries by devoting time and doing all the research work and yet we see such comments.
I'm sure shobhit is approaching the topic in his own structured way. Please wait patiently, he will definetly advice you. Please dont spoil his structured approach by forcing him to deviate from the topic by asking for investment strategies.

Anonymous said...

Hi Shobit,

Thanks for the nice articles.
You have mentioned somewhere that you have taken a Insurance policy where you pay10k as premium and you are getting a cover of 50 lacs.If the person survives till the maturity period, he doesn't get anything. I tried searching the whole LIC website. Couldn't find a similar policy. Please let me know on the same.

Mail id senthildsl@yahoo.com

Regards
Senthil

IT Correspondent said...

Hi Senthil,

Sorry for the late response.
I'm with SBI Life - a policy called Shield cover - (UIN No: 111N018V01)

You may like to enquire further for similar policy from LIC - Just call up any of the LIC brnaches and ask for a no-frill death benefit only policy and they will tell you everything.

Thanks,
Shobhit

Rama said...

The reason people select option 1 for Case B as far as I can say is in case of an accident no one likes to spend entire lumpsum from ones pocket for costs towards repairs.
Its again a risk versus benefits question my friend.
If a person wants to play very safe and not risk takers then yes OPtion 1 for case B is better. The thing is you may never have an accident in your lifetime but when you do the pain and cost at that point of time makes you feel justfied that you have taken the insurance even when when you didnt need it.
Aggressive risk takers would say go to hell.
The same way people think about Stocks. Risk takers do extensive trading, whereas people averse to risk should even forget there is something such as a stock market.

maYank said...

That was a afantastic way to present the case for Term Insurance. Kudos!


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