The Psychology of Money Flashcards
What is the psychology of money?
It’s a soft skill where how you behave is more important than what you know.
When it comes to finance, soft skills are more important than the technical side of money.
Finance is overwhelmingly taught as a math-based field, where you put data into a formula and the formula tells you what to do. What is missing from this approach to money?
Knowing what to do tells you nothing about what happens in your head when you try to do it.
We think about, and are taught about money in ways that are too much like physics (with rules and laws), and not enough like psychology (with emotions and nuance).
Physics isn’t controversial. It’s guided by laws. Finance is different. It’s guided by peoples behaviors.
Which two lenses will help you understand finance better than most?
Psychology and history
To grasp why people bury themselves in debt, you don’t need to study interest rates; you need to study the history of greed, insecurity, and optimism.
To get why investors sell out at the bottom of a bear market, you don’t need to study the math of expected future returns; you need to think about the agony of looking at your family and wondering if your investments are imperilling their future.
What is the largest contributor to how you think the world works?
Your personal experiences
Not intelligence, or education, or sophistication. Just the dumb lack of when and where you were born.
Your personal experiences with money make up maybe 0.00000001% of what’s happened in the world, but maybe 80% of how you think the world works.
What is that quote by investor Michael Batnick?
“Some lessons have to be experienced before they can be learned.”
We all think we know how the world works. But we’ve all only experienced a tiny sliver of it.
What mix of personal factors go into many of the financial decisions that people make?
- Environment
- The people around you
- Personal history
- Your unique world view
- Ego / Pride
- Marketing
- Incentives
Aside from personal history and worldview, why else do money decisions tend to be so messy?
People have only recently began to talk about money.
Money has been around a long time, but the modern foundation of money decisions—saving and investing—is based on concepts that are practically infants.
- The 401k didn’t exist until 1978
- The Roth IRA was introduced in 1998
- Index funds are less than 50 years old
How does Morgan Housel define luck and risk?
Luck and risk are both the reality that every outcome in life is guided by forces other than individual effort.
You are one person in a game with 7 billion other people and infinite moving parts. The accidental impact of actions outside of your control can be more consequential than the ones you consciously take.
Psychologically, what’s the difference between my mistakes and your mistakes?
Other peoples’ mistakes are usually attributed to bad decisions, while your own failures are usually chalked up to the dark side of risk.
When judging someone else’s failures, you’re likely to prefer a simple story of cause-and-effect because you don’t know what’s going on inside their head. (“You had a bad outcome so you must have made a bad decision.”)
But when judging yourself, you can make up a wild narrative, justifying your past decisions and attributing bad outcomes to risk.
What is one of the biggest problems we face when trying to learn about the best way to manage money?
Identifying what is luck, what is skill, and what is risk.
The line between “inspiringly bold” and “foolishly reckless” can be a millimetre thick, and only visible with hindsight.
How can we get closer to finding actionable takeaways when it comes to learning from other people, (financial) successes and failures?
Focus less on specific individuals and case studies and more on broad patterns. Look for broad patterns of success and failure.
The more extreme the outcome, the less likely, you can apply its lessons to your own life, because the more likely the outcome was influenced by extreme ends of luck or risk.
What is the hardest financial skill to learn?
Getting the goalpost to stop moving.
It gets dangerous when the taste of having more—more money, more power, more prestige—increases ambition, faster than satisfaction.
What is two things is modern capitalism a pro at generating?
Wealth and envy
Perhaps they go hand-in-hand; wanting to surpass, your peers can be the fuel of hard work. But life isn’t any fun without a sense of enough. Happiness, as it’s said, is just results minus expectations.
What is one of the key drivers of success (if not the key driver) in investing?
Time
Specifically: consistent investing over a long period of time.
Compound interest leads to exponential gains. The longer that math is at work, the more your gains and the more your gains accelerate.
What is the first law of the survival mindset (as applied to money)?
More than wanting big returns, want to be financially unbreakable. If you’re unbreakable, you’ll get the biggest returns, because you’ll be able to stick around long enough for compounding to work wonders.
Compounding doesn’t rely on earning big returns. Merely good returns sustained uninterrupted for the longest period of time, especially in times of chaos, will always win.