Study: AI beats people at picking stocks – But there's a catch – Komando
Have you ever heard about Burton Malkiel, author of “A Random Walk Down Wall Street?” He proclaimed that a blindfolded monkey tossing darts at the financial section of a newspaper could select a portfolio that would do just as well as one chosen by experts.
Now, what if that monkey was going up against artificial intelligence? Here’s a twist for your 401K and retirement plans: Chatbots like ChatGPT are better at picking stocks than humans. (Matt, my Morgan Stanley man, if you are reading this, let’s talk on Monday.)
Yes, AI beats humans. According to a new study, researchers asked ChatGPT to pick stocks based on criteria average investors find important — like “grows in value” and “not a total disaster.”
It picked a collection of companies, and they actually gained value. The 10 leading investments, on average, lost value during the same 2023 timeframe. Check this out — another study showed ChatGPT is better at predicting future stock prices than some expensive software planners currently use. Whoa.
Does that mean you should trust your investments (or investments-to-be) to a chatbot? Not exactly.
And they’d tell you something like this was coming. Investment managers have been using AI, aka “robo-advisors” (yeah, I got a kick out of that) for years to help predict and choose stocks.
Financial planners are quick to say that consumers shouldn’t let chatbots make investment decisions for them — but that’s what they would say, right? Are they just afraid of losing their jobs? The truth is more complicated.
Asking a chatbot directly for a stock pick is still rolling the dice. It’s like going on Reddit or Google and typing in “best stock ever.” And financial planners have tested this, too. The more parameters you feed ChatGPT — like a portfolio with a certain amount of equity or risk — the more mistakes the chatbot seems to make.
An expert can use chatbots like this to gather tons of info very quickly or get useful summaries to help make decisions. But in the hands of an amateur, complete reliance on AI is less like “The Wolf of Wall Street” and more like … well, the end of “The Wolf of Wall Street,” minus the crimes.
Whether you like to play the stock market, pick out safe mutual funds, or just think, “Wow, a retirement fund sure would be nice someday,” AI is definitely gonna be involved. Consumer-friendly chatbots can put a ton of information into the hands of everyday investors that wasn’t available before.
They’re like the tools fund managers have been using for years, but now you get to peak behind the scenes. You have lots of (free) options to ask, like ChatGPT, Bing, Bard or your AI of choice.
Remember, these chatbots are 100% wrong at times. That said, here’s what you can do:
✅ Check out my warning on fake investment apps before you jump in. Be careful out there, folks! Where there is money, there will be scammers.
More:
Get even more know-how in the Komando Community! Here, you can enjoy The Kim Komando Show on your schedule, read Kim’s eBooks for free, ask your tech questions in the Forum — and so much more.
source
Now, what if that monkey was going up against artificial intelligence? Here’s a twist for your 401K and retirement plans: Chatbots like ChatGPT are better at picking stocks than humans. (Matt, my Morgan Stanley man, if you are reading this, let’s talk on Monday.)
Yes, AI beats humans. According to a new study, researchers asked ChatGPT to pick stocks based on criteria average investors find important — like “grows in value” and “not a total disaster.”
It picked a collection of companies, and they actually gained value. The 10 leading investments, on average, lost value during the same 2023 timeframe. Check this out — another study showed ChatGPT is better at predicting future stock prices than some expensive software planners currently use. Whoa.
Does that mean you should trust your investments (or investments-to-be) to a chatbot? Not exactly.
And they’d tell you something like this was coming. Investment managers have been using AI, aka “robo-advisors” (yeah, I got a kick out of that) for years to help predict and choose stocks.
Financial planners are quick to say that consumers shouldn’t let chatbots make investment decisions for them — but that’s what they would say, right? Are they just afraid of losing their jobs? The truth is more complicated.
Asking a chatbot directly for a stock pick is still rolling the dice. It’s like going on Reddit or Google and typing in “best stock ever.” And financial planners have tested this, too. The more parameters you feed ChatGPT — like a portfolio with a certain amount of equity or risk — the more mistakes the chatbot seems to make.
An expert can use chatbots like this to gather tons of info very quickly or get useful summaries to help make decisions. But in the hands of an amateur, complete reliance on AI is less like “The Wolf of Wall Street” and more like … well, the end of “The Wolf of Wall Street,” minus the crimes.
Whether you like to play the stock market, pick out safe mutual funds, or just think, “Wow, a retirement fund sure would be nice someday,” AI is definitely gonna be involved. Consumer-friendly chatbots can put a ton of information into the hands of everyday investors that wasn’t available before.
They’re like the tools fund managers have been using for years, but now you get to peak behind the scenes. You have lots of (free) options to ask, like ChatGPT, Bing, Bard or your AI of choice.
Remember, these chatbots are 100% wrong at times. That said, here’s what you can do:
✅ Check out my warning on fake investment apps before you jump in. Be careful out there, folks! Where there is money, there will be scammers.
More:
Get even more know-how in the Komando Community! Here, you can enjoy The Kim Komando Show on your schedule, read Kim’s eBooks for free, ask your tech questions in the Forum — and so much more.
source