Both of these extreme spending personalities suffer pain and guilt when faced with opening up their wallets.
If you treat your portfolio as a gambling stake instead of a nest egg, the consequences can be dramatic.
Step one: Recognize -- and overcome -- the psychological hurdles that influence our behavior.
"... I think that being frugal is not the same as being a tightwad. They are more thoughtful about their spending- not to the point of getting anxious, but keeping in mind what is the return on the investment. Spendthrifts, if they have the income, can continue to live that way, just as long as the money does not run out." – Stainlesssteel
This 60-item test from MarketPsych, a firm that studies investor biases, offers insight into your investing vulnerabilities and suggests how you can improve your financial decisions.
These reads help you understand how your brain works when you make financial decisions.
Don’t let tricky marketing ploys influence your financial decisions and get you to spend more.
Delaying a financial decision can help give the logical part of your brain a chance to kick in.
Our natural tendency to seek out others with similar opinions can be harmful to our portfolios.
Do you buy and sell stocks for the thrill of gambling or for the purpose of investing? You can find out by taking this short quiz.
This 60-item test from MarketPsych, a firm that studies investor biases, offers insight into your investing vulnerabilities and suggests how you can improve your financial decisions.
Richard Zeckhauser, Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University, discusses the tendency to go with the flow and why it can harm your portfolio.
Nick Barberis, Professor of Finance at Yale University, discusses how overconfidence in investing can hurt your portfolio in the long run.