Lemming

Lemming

"Lemming" is a disparaging term for an investor who exhibits herd mentality and invests without doing their own research, which often leads to losses. An investor that is successful in doing this can, possibly, spot lemming activity and consider exploiting it for gains by moving in a contrarian fashion. Conducting the necessary due diligence, or thinking like a contrarian, is a much better strategy than succumbing to a lemming mentality, especially when irrational exuberance seems to have gripped the market. Conducting the necessary due diligence, or thinking like a contrarian, is a much better strategy than succumbing to a lemming mentality, especially when irrational exuberance seems to have gripped the market. Metaphorically speaking, a lemming, in financial markets parlance, refers to an investor who is easily swayed by the irrationality of market price action that is prone to occur at the extremes, and jumps in for fear of missing out on, what they falsely believe, is a golden opportunity. Studies have found that investors are most influenced by current events — market news, political events, earnings, etc. — and ignore long-term investment and economic fundamentals.

"Lemming" is a disparaging term for an investor who exhibits herd mentality and invests without doing their own research, which often leads to losses.

What Is a Lemming in Investing ?

"Lemming" is a disparaging term for an investor who exhibits herd mentality and invests without doing their own research, which often leads to losses.

"Lemming" is a disparaging term for an investor who exhibits herd mentality and invests without doing their own research, which often leads to losses.
According to urban legend, lemmings are small rodents known for possessing instincts that cause them to, periodically, charge en masse off cliffs, with the end result being their death.
Conducting the necessary due diligence, or thinking like a contrarian, is a much better strategy than succumbing to a lemming mentality, especially when irrational exuberance seems to have gripped the market.

Understanding the Term "Lemming"

According to urban legend, lemmings are small rodents known for possessing instincts that cause them to, periodically, charge en masse off cliffs, with the end result being their death. Metaphorically speaking, a lemming, in financial markets parlance, refers to an investor who is easily swayed by the irrationality of market price action that is prone to occur at the extremes, and jumps in for fear of missing out on, what they falsely believe, is a golden opportunity.

This "herd mentality," typically, increases the chance of losing money, because investors either leave the market too early or get into it too late when prices are already too high to make a profit. To counter the "herd mentality," many sophisticated investors, such as contrarian traders, react in an opposite manner when they sense that market movement is due to the influx of lemmings. For example, if investors are in a buying frenzy, contrarians will sell and when lemmings sell, these investors will buy instead.

To keep from becoming a lemming investor, one has to keep their emotions under control. In other words, separate from the analysis that is critical to placing a trade. An investor that is successful in doing this can, possibly, spot lemming activity and consider exploiting it for gains by moving in a contrarian fashion.

Conducting the necessary due diligence, or thinking like a contrarian, is a much better strategy than succumbing to a lemming mentality, especially when irrational exuberance seems to have gripped the market. Extreme optimism often coincides with market tops and extreme pessimism is quite apparent at market bottoms. The obvious point is that these market extremes can only be factually identified after the fact. In other words, with the clarity that only comes with hindsight.

Savvy investors know that the time to sell is when prices are much higher than fundamentals suggest and that the time to buy is when the prices are much lower than is reasonably warranted. Extreme optimism should be viewed in a bearish vein and extreme pessimism should be viewed as bullish, which is the opposite of the way a lemming thinks.

Studies have found that investors are most influenced by current events — market news, political events, earnings, etc. — and ignore long-term investment and economic fundamentals. Furthermore, if a movement starts in one direction, it tends to pick up more and more investors with time and momentum. The impact of such lemming-like behavior has been made worse in recent years due to an abundance of sensationalist financial, economic, and other news that bombards the sensibilities of investors. This proliferation of financial media inevitably affects investor psychology and gives birth to lemmings.

Strategies to Avoid Becoming a Lemming

  1. Stick to a plan.
  2. Know your goals.
  3. Pick a strategy that aligns with your goals.
  4. Minimize your risk.
  5. Don't succumb to greed or fear.
  6. Understand your investing personality.
  7. Stay within your investing comfort zone.
  8. Stick to your investment approach. 
  9. Don't get sucked into the hype of "financial porn" media, publicity, and advertising.

Related terms:

Contrarian

Contrarian investing is a type of investment strategy where investors go against current market trends. read more

Emotional Neutrality

Emotional neutrality is the concept of removing greed, fear, and other human emotions from financial or investment decisions. read more

Fundamentals

Fundamentals consist of the basic qualitative and quantitative information that underlies a company or other organization's financial and economic position. read more

Herd Instinct

Herd instinct in finance is the phenomenon where investors follow what they perceive other investors are doing rather than their own analysis. read more

Irrational Exuberance

Irrational exuberance refers to investor enthusiasm that drives asset prices higher than those assets' fundamentals justify. read more

Market Psychology

Market psychology refers to the prevailing sentiment of investors at any given time and can impact market direction regardless of the fundamentals. read more

Negative Feedback

Feedback occurs when outputs of a system are routed back as inputs; negative feedback describes how the system's process produces negative effects. read more

Noise Trader Risk

Noise Trader Risk is a form of market risk associated with the investment decisions of traders being emotional and undisciplined. read more

Positive Feedback

Positive feedback—also called a positive feedback loop—is a self-perpetuating pattern of investment behavior where the end result reinforces the initial act. read more

Sophisticated Investor

A sophisticated investor is a type of investor with significant net worth and experience, permitting advanced investment opportunities. read more