Explore the World's Best Ideas
Join today and uncover 100+ curated journeys from 50+ topics. Unlock access to our mobile app with extensive features.
None of us are immune to our own psychology when it comes to money. Any of us can make a bad decision about our finances if we don’t prepare in advance for what is to come.
Here is what Tim’s story can teach you about the psychology of money and how to manage yours, so you don’t lose everything you’ve worked hard for (not financial advice).
2
23 reads
Think about what it’s going to feel like when your investments take a hit. Preparing for major events like a recession can help you handle them in the future. Looking at previous recessions can show you that 30%-50% drops are not uncommon.
How are you going to feel if that happens? What could you do to prepare so you don’t freak out and sell your investments at rock bottom prices?
2
8 reads
Sometimes knowing lots about money can be a disadvantage. You can start to hypothesize and overthink the entire world of finance and do your head in, in the process. That’s what Tim describes it felt like recently.
2
10 reads
You can bet the market is going to go down because of something like a pandemic by shorting stocks (betting stocks will go down). During uncertain times, the situation can change rapidly.
The markets can be extremely volatile and that can cause unexpected losses. Unless you are a professional trader and do it for a living, it’s often best not to play the game and keep your face and finances intact.
2
4 reads
There are opportunities everywhere. There are endless chances to make money. Tim recommends going after the ones that exploit your core competencies and are the most appealing to you.
He argues you can miss plenty of opportunities and only take advantage of a small few and net-net still do very well. “I try to keep that in mind and zoom out. Not look at this as an anomaly of a few weeks,” says Tim.
2
6 reads
Zooming out is helpful. Your financial future is not built in a few months. That is short-term thinking that will make you go broke. You invest for the long-term and you earn money over the same time period. It’s okay to make a few mistakes as long as you don’t bet all your money on one thing and diversify your portfolio.
This period in history is only a blip on a much bigger graph — remember that.
3
4 reads
You can act like a sucker when you think you’re smarter at investing than Warren Buffett. There are other ways to make money outside of investing.
2
5 reads
If you are in a hurry, then that is a sign of desperation. Does desperation sound like a good state of mind to invest your life savings? Probably not.
If I feel rushed to make a decision…the likelihood of me making a bad decision is very high. And the cost of undoing that bad decision can be very high.
It is “we” that hit the “execute trade” button to financial ruin. Slow down.
2
4 reads
There is a cost to everything you do. Investing your money and worrying about it all the time has a psychological cost. It’s all fun and games until you play and it’s your own money. Then, stress takes away some of your brainpower that you can use to be creative.
That is a huge cost that can stop you from profiting from the hard-earned skills you love deploying. It’s worth thinking about this trade-off before becoming obsessed with the markets and your ability to invest in them.
2
3 reads
2
7 reads
IDEAS CURATED BY
Learn more about moneyandinvestments with this collection
How to start a successful business
How to build a strong team
How to market your business
Related collections
Similar ideas
2 ideas
How to Speed Read | Tim Ferriss
Tim Ferriss
4 ideas
3 ideas
Mark Zuckerberg onThe Tim Ferriss Show
Tim Ferriss
Read & Learn
20x Faster
without
deepstash
with
deepstash
with
deepstash
Personalized microlearning
—
100+ Learning Journeys
—
Access to 200,000+ ideas
—
Access to the mobile app
—
Unlimited idea saving
—
—
Unlimited history
—
—
Unlimited listening to ideas
—
—
Downloading & offline access
—
—
Supercharge your mind with one idea per day
Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.
I agree to receive email updates