Saturday, September 24, 2022

Top 10 Lessons from "The Psychology of Money" by Morgan Housel

1. Compounding

Sustained long term investments beat short termed high return interests over time due to compound interest.

Fun fact: Warren Buffet accumulated 97% of his wealth after his 65th birthday.

2. Wealth is what you don’t see

We have a tendency to judge wealth based on what we see: cars, clothes, and houses.

Investment accounts, on the other hand, are not visible. We base our financial success on outward appearances.

3. Freedom

The ability to wake up every morning and say, "I can do whatever I want, when I want, with who I want, for as long as I want," is the ultimate form of wealth.

This, above all, is the highest dividend money can pay.

4. Strategy

Live below your means.
You should value your freedom of autonomy more than buying nice things you wanna have right now.

Use that money to educate yourself and start investing.

Being willing to delay your gratification is a must!

5. Risk

Risk is what is left over after you thought you took everything into account.
It is unpredictable and noone is safe from it.

Risk is gonna decrease over time when you make long term investments and don´t worry about short term volatile market situations.

6. Setbacks

Losing money once in a while is normal but you shouldn´t think that you lost money because you necessarily messed up.

Look at it as a fee for investing and making profitable returns over time instead of a fine that needs to be paid for doing something wrong.

7. Reasonable vs. rational

Beware of the difference between acting upon emotion or rational thoughts.

One is not better than the other.

Sometimes, acting reasonably instead of rationally even when the numbers don´t add up on your spreadsheets, could lead to huge success.

8. Room for error

Morgan assumes that the future returns on his investments will be 13 percent lower than the historical average.

As a result, he saves more than he would if he assumed the future will be similar to the past. It's his margin of safety.

9. Benchmarks

Don´t compare your profits and returns to those of other investors.

Measure your success by what makes you happy and what your goals are.

Investing is not a race and you don´t have to feel ashamed nor entitled based on how little or how much profit you made.

10. Tails, you win

Long tails, or the extremes of the distribution of outcomes, have enormous sway in finance, where a small number of events account for the vast majority of outcomes.

A tail event is the cause of anything huge, profitable, famous, or influential.

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