
The Psychology of Money
đ¸ Behavior > Intelligence â Financial success is less about knowledge and more about behaviorâpatience, humility, and managing emotions.
đ˛ Luck and Risk Are Siblings â Outcomes are shaped by forces outside our control. Respect luck and risk equally when judging success.
đ Know When to Stop â âEnoughâ is the key to happiness. Constantly moving goalposts lead to endless dissatisfaction.
đą Wealth is Time, Not Stuff â True wealth is the ability to control your time, not flashy displays of money.
đ° Compounding Needs Time â Good returns sustained for long periodsânot big winsâcreate extraordinary wealth.
đĄ Survival Over Maximization â Staying financially unbreakable is more important than chasing high returns.
đ Plans Will Fail â Always expect the unexpected. Build flexibility and margin of safety into every financial plan.
đ Tail Events Drive Everything â Extreme, rare outcomes shape the world. Success often depends on surviving long enough to benefit from them.
đ§ Manage Your Ego â Avoid lifestyle inflation and social comparison. Living below your means removes unnecessary stress.
đ Wealth is Invisible â Wealth is what you donât seeâsavings, investments, freedomânot whatâs flaunted.
đ° Save Without Reason â Savings arenât just for known expenses; theyâre protection against lifeâs inevitable surprises.
đ Time Horizon Wins â Long-term patience outperforms short-term brilliance. Extend your timeline to tilt odds in your favor.
đśââď¸ Average Actions During Chaos â Being calm and consistent when others panic is the real edge in investing.
đ§Š Play Your Own Game â Define your personal goals. Donât let othersâ actions, who are playing different games, distort your strategy.
đŽ Optimism â Blind Faith â Expect positive long-term outcomes, but prepare for constant short-term setbacks.
đ Respect Ruin â Take risks, but avoid ruinous risks that can knock you out of the game forever.
đ§š Worship Room for Error â Margin of safety ensures survival through uncertainty, allowing compounding to work its magic.
đ§ Happiness Over Rationality â Good financial decisions prioritize peace of mind over rigid rationality.
đĄ Independence is the Ultimate Goal â Freedom to work how you want, with whom you want, when you want, is the highest form of wealth.
đ§š Simplicity Wins â The best financial advice: save, live below your means, embrace patience, and stay the course.
âThe world is full of obvious things which nobody by any chance ever observes.ââSherlock Holmes
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Doing well with money has a little to do with how smart you are and a lot to do with how you behave. And behavior is hard to teach, even to really smart people.
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Financial outcomes are driven by luck, independent of intelligence and effort.
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Some lessons have to be experienced before they can be understood.
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Every financial decision a person makes, makes sense to them in that moment and checks the boxes they need to check. They tell themselves a story about what theyâre doing and why theyâre doing it, and that story has been shaped by their own unique experiences.
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Luck and risk are siblings. They are both the reality that every outcome in life is guided by forces other than individual effort.
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Nothing is as good or as bad as it seems.
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Luck and risk are both the reality that every outcome in life is guided by forces other than individual effort. They are so similar that you canât believe in one without equally respecting the other. They both happen because the world is too complex to allow 100% of your actions to dictate 100% of your outcomes.
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âThe customer is always rightâ and âcustomers donât know what they wantâ are both accepted business wisdom.
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The difficulty in identifying what is luck, what is skill, and what is risk is one of the biggest problems we face when trying to learn about the best way to manage money.
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Bill Gates once said, âSuccess is a lousy teacher. It seduces smart people into thinking they canât lose.â
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There is no reason to risk what you have and need for what you donât have and donât need.
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Never Enough
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The hardest financial skill is getting the goalpost to stop moving.
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Social comparison is the problem here.
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âEnoughâ is not too little.
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There are many things never worth risking, no matter the potential gain.
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Happiness, as itâs said, is just results minus expectations.
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More than 2,000 books are dedicated to how Warren Buffett built his fortune. Many of them are wonderful. But few pay enough attention to the simplest fact: Buffettâs fortune isnât due to just being a good investor, but being a good investor since he was literally a child.
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There are books on economic cycles, trading strategies, and sector bets. But the most powerful and important book should be called Shut Up And Wait. Itâs just one page with a long-term chart of economic growth.
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Getting money is one thing. Keeping it is another.
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Getting money requires taking risks, being optimistic, and putting yourself out there. But keeping money requires the opposite of taking risk. It requires humility, and fear that what youâve made can be taken away from you just as fast. It requires frugality and an acceptance that at least some of what youâve made is attributable to luck, so past success canât be relied upon to repeat indefinitely.
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Compounding only works if you can give an asset years and years to grow. Itâs like planting oak trees: A year of growth will never show much progress, 10 years can make a meaningful difference, and 50 years can create something absolutely extraordinary.
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Applying the survival mindset to the real world comes down to appreciating three things.
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More than I want big returns, I want to be financially unbreakable. And if Iâm unbreakable I actually think Iâll get the biggest returns, because Iâll be able to stick around long enough for compounding to work wonders.
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Planning is important, but the most important part of every plan is to plan on the plan not going according to plan.
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A barbelled personalityâoptimistic about the future, but paranoid about what will prevent you from getting to the futureâis vital.
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Compounding doesnât rely on earning big returns. Merely good returns sustained uninterrupted for the longest period of timeâespecially in times of chaos and havocâwill always win.
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A plan is only useful if it can survive reality. And a future filled with unknowns is everyoneâs reality.
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Optimism is usually defined as a belief that things will go well. But thatâs incomplete. Sensible optimism is a belief that the odds are in your favor, and over time things will balance out to a good outcome even if what happens in between is filled with misery. And in fact you know it will be filled with misery. You can be optimistic that the long-term growth trajectory is up and to the right, but equally sure that the road between now and then is filled with landmines, and always will be. Those two things are not mutually exclusive.
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Anything that is huge, profitable, famous, or influential is the result of a tail eventâan outlying one-in-thousands or millions event. And most of our attention goes to things that are huge, profitable, famous, or influential. When most of what we pay attention to is the result of a tail, itâs easy to underestimate how rare and powerful they are.
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A good definition of an investing genius is the man or woman who can do the average thing when all those around them are going crazy.
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The highest form of wealth is the ability to wake up every morning and say, âI can do whatever I want today.â
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People want to become wealthier to make them happier. Happiness is a complicated subject because everyoneâs different. But if thereâs a common denominator in happinessâa universal fuel of joyâitâs that people want to control their lives.
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The ability to do what you want, when you want, with who you want, for as long as you want, is priceless. It is the highest dividend money pays.
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Moneyâs greatest intrinsic valueâand this canât be overstatedâis its ability to give you control over your time. To obtain, bit by bit, a level of independence and autonomy that comes from unspent assets that give you greater control over what you can do and when you can do it.
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âYour kids donât want your money (or what your money buys) anywhere near as much as they want you. Specifically, they want you with them,â
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When you see someone driving a nice car, you rarely think, âWow, the guy driving that car is cool.âInstead, you think, âWow, if I had that car people would think Iâm cool.âSubconscious or not, this is how people think.
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People tend to want wealth to signal to others that they should be liked and admired. But in reality those other people often bypass admiring you, not because they donât think wealth is admirable, but because they use your wealth as a benchmark for their own desire to be liked and admired.
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Someone driving a $100,000 car might be wealthy. But the only data point you have about their wealth is that they have $100,000 less than they did before they bought the car (or $100,000 more in debt). Thatâs all you know about them.
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We tend to judge wealth by what we see, because thatâs the information we have in front of us. We canât see peopleâs bank accounts or brokerage statements. So we rely on outward appearances to gauge financial success. Cars. Homes. Instagram photos.
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When most people say they want to be a millionaire, what they might actually mean is âIâd like to spend a million dollars.â And that is literally the opposite of being a millionaire.
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Wealth is hidden. Itâs income not spent. Wealth is an option not yet taken to buy something later. Its value lies in offering you options, flexibility, and growth to one day purchase more stuff than you could right now.
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The problem for many of us is that it is easy to find rich role models. Itâs harder to find wealthy ones because by definition their success is more hidden.
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Past a certain level of income, what you need is just what sits below your ego.
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Savings can be created by spending less. You can spend less if you desire less. And you will desire less if you care less about what others think of you.
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Every bit of savings is like taking a point in the future that would have been owned by someone else and giving it back to yourself.
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Having more control over your time and options is becoming one of the most valuable currencies in the world.
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One of Grahamâs criteria instructs conservative investors to avoid stocks trading for more than 1.5 times book value.
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Sunk costsâanchoring decisions to past efforts that canât be refundedâare a devil in a world where people change over time. They make our future selves prisoners to our past, different, selves. Itâs the equivalent of a stranger making major life decisions for you.
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Every job looks easy when youâre not the one doing it.
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Optimism is a belief that the odds of a good outcome are in your favor over time, even when there will be setbacks along the way.
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Tell someone that everything will be great and theyâre likely to either shrug you off or offer a skeptical eye. Tell someone theyâre in danger and you have their undivided attention.
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There are lots of overnight tragedies. There are rarely overnight miracles.
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Growth is driven by compounding, which always takes time. Destruction is driven by single points of failure, which can happen in seconds, and loss of confidence, which can happen in an instant.
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Expecting things to be great means a best-case scenario that feels flat. Pessimism reduces expectations, narrowing the gap between possible outcomes and outcomes you feel great about.
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When planning we focus on what we want to do and can do, neglecting the plans and skills of others whose decisions might affect our outcomes.
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We focus on what we know and neglect what we do not know, which makes us overly confident in our beliefs.
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Luck and risk are both real and hard to identify. Do so when judging both yourself and others. Respect the power of luck and risk and youâll have a better chance of focusing on things you can actually control. Youâll also have a better chance of finding the right role models.
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No matter how much you earn, you will never build wealth unless you can put a lid on how much fun you can have with your money right now, today.
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Manage your money in a way that helps you sleep at night. Thatâs different from saying you should aim to earn the highest returns or save a specific percentage of your income. Some people wonât sleep well unless theyâre earning the highest returns; others will only get a good rest if theyâre conservatively invested. To each their own. But the foundation of, âdoes this help me sleep at night?â is the best universal guidepost for all financial decisions.
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If you want to do better as an investor, the single most powerful thing you can do is increase your time horizon. Time is the most powerful force in investing. It makes little things grow big and big mistakes fade away. It canât neutralize luck and risk, but it pushes results closer towards what people deserve.
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Become OK with a lot of things going wrong. You can be wrong half the time and still make a fortune, because a small minority of things account for the majority of outcomes. No matter what youâre doing with your money you should be comfortable with a lot of stuff not working. Thatâs just how the world is. So you should always measure how youâve done by looking at your full portfolio, rather than individual investments. It is fine to have a large chunk of poor investments and a few outstanding ones. Thatâs usually the best-case scenario. Judging how youâve done by focusing on individual investments makes winners look more brilliant than they were, and losers appear more regrettable than they should.
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Use money to gain control over your time, because not having control of your time is such a powerful and universal drag on happiness. The ability to do what you want, when you want, with who you want, for as long as you want to, pays the highest dividend that exists in finance.
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Be nicer and less flashy. No one is impressed with your possessions as much as you are. You might think you want a fancy car or a nice watch. But what you probably want is respect and admiration. And youâre more likely to gain those things through kindness and humility than horsepower and chrome.
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Save. Just save. You donât need a specific reason to save. Itâs great to save for a car, or a downpayment, or a medical emergency. But saving for things that are impossible to predict or define is one of the best reasons to save. Everyoneâs life is a continuous chain of surprises. Savings that arenât earmarked for anything in particular is a hedge against lifeâs inevitable ability to surprise the hell out of you at the worst possible moment.
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Define the cost of success and be ready to pay it. Because nothing worthwhile is free. And remember that most financial costs donât have visible price tags. Uncertainty, doubt, and regret are common costs in the finance world. Theyâre often worth paying. But you have to view them as fees (a price worth paying to get something nice in exchange) rather than fines (a penalty you should avoid).
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Worship room for error. A gap between what could happen in the future and what you need to happen in the future in order to do well is what gives you endurance, and endurance is what makes compounding magic over time. Room for error often looks like a conservative hedge, but if it keeps you in the game it can pay for itself many times over.
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Avoid the extreme ends of financial decisions. Everyoneâs goals and desires will change over time, and the more extreme your past decisions were the more you may regret them as you evolve.
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You should like risk because it pays off over time. But you should be paranoid of ruinous risk because it prevents you from taking future risks that will pay off over time.
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Define the game youâre playing, and make sure your actions are not being influenced by people playing a different game.
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Respect the mess. Smart, informed, and reasonable people can disagree in finance, because people have vastly different goals and desires. There is no single right answer; just the answer that works for you.
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Independence, to me, doesnât mean youâll stop working. It means you only do the work you like with people you like at the times you want for as long as you want.
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Comfortably living below what you can afford, without much desire for more, removes a tremendous amount of social pressure that many people in the modern first world subject themselves to.
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Good decisions arenât always rational. At some point you have to choose between being happy or being âright.â
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The first rule of compounding is to never interrupt it unnecessarily.