What personal finance mistakes should everyone avoid?

in #finance8 years ago

Don’ts:


Don’t invest in anything that you don’t understand. Yourself. Not because someone sold it to you. Period.

Don’t pay high fees for investment products unless you know why the product is worth it. Most aren’t.

Don’t assume that someone giving you financial advice has their incentives aligned with you doing well. Most people in finance can (and sometimes do!) make a lot of money while not adding value. It’s not that they set out to purposefully do this, it’s just that the way they get compensated lacks alignment with your financial well-being.

Don’t fall for behavioral marketing tactics. Psychology of Influence is an excellent book to read to understand how they work. Also, check out my article on how to practice behavioral defense: Behavioral Defense in Decision Making

Don’t focus on the short-term, listen to financial news media, or let news about the market or the economy affect your long-term investing strategy

Do’s:


Do save as much as you can consistently from an early age. Compounding works best when you start early.

Do have an emergency cash reserve fund to cover 3–9 months of expenses before you begin investing. It will help you not be a forced seller on your long-term investments when circumstances change unexpectedly

Do start with a low-cost, passive investing strategy as your default option. Only deviate if you know exactly why that makes sense for you. Here is why.

Do focus on the long-term. Benjamin Graham said: “In the short-term the markets are a voting machine, but in the long-term they are a weighing machine.” What he meant is that securities can trade at any price in the short term based on people’s opinion, but in the long-term the markets are pretty good at properly valuing assets and cash flows.

Do match your investments to when you will need the money. Investments in stocks should be ideally for time horizons of 5+ years, with a minimum of 3. If you mis-match the duration of your investments vs. when you will need the money, you run the risk of being a forced seller at a temporary mar

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Thanks, definitely agree on the avoid of high fee products, for example if you can buy a ETF with trading commission only and around 0.2 management fee per year, why would you buy mutual fund with 1 % subscribing fee and 1% management fee? Invest smart.

Yes you must be smart in investing :)

What a intressting reading @jasvinder-pal

I just started to look at this market of crypto investment. its a very young market

In soon futuer i thing alot of things will change both with TAX and Regulations. Hope its get better but i not things soo, sadly.

More company want eat of the capital.

Hope this end well for us

Best regards @mrstaf

Will follow and upvote Thanks

Thanks im new here and tour support will be likeable 😊