• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

20 New Cars That Are Piling up on Dealership Lots (Which Can Mean Lower Prices This Time of Year)

December 26, 2025

Here’s What Workers Say Matters Most in a Job in 2026 and What They’ll Do to Get It

December 26, 2025

How to Ensure AI Is Working for You and Not Against You

December 25, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • 20 New Cars That Are Piling up on Dealership Lots (Which Can Mean Lower Prices This Time of Year)
  • Here’s What Workers Say Matters Most in a Job in 2026 and What They’ll Do to Get It
  • How to Ensure AI Is Working for You and Not Against You
  • How to Turn a Cyberattack Into a Strategic Advantage
  • How to Build an ADA-Compliant Website — and Avoid Legal Fees
  • Expand Your International Reach With This Special Lifetime Babbel Offer
  • These 5 Common Items Could Get You Flagged by TSA This Holiday Season
  • Don’t Let These 7 Home Trends Tank Your Sale Price
Friday, December 26
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Micro Loan Nexus
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Micro Loan Nexus
Home » 13 Cognitive Mistakes You May Be Making When Thinking About Money
Investing

13 Cognitive Mistakes You May Be Making When Thinking About Money

News RoomBy News RoomSeptember 12, 20230 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

People are not always rational agents. We all make mistakes – this is what makes us human. However, for the longest time, economic theory has made assumptions about behavior in financial markets based on humans being rational. Because of this gap between theory and reality, behavioral finance, which focuses on the influence of psychology in investors’ decision-making process, has become an integral part of financial planning. This discussion will touch on 13 cognitive mistakes you may be making when it comes to your finances, how they can affect your investments, and how to avoid them.

1. Illusion Of Control

With this bias, you believe you can control the outcome of an event you have no control over. World-diversified portfolios can offer diversification and potential return benefits to investors. But maybe you believe you should only be investing in the United States because as a resident, you think you have more control over how those companies do.

2. Money Illusion

You think that money holds the same value today as any time in the past or future. This vision fails to factor in inflation or returns. I see this a lot when people try to come up with a magic number to live on in retirement. The think that if their expenses are $100,000 today, getting an income of $100,000 per year in retirement in 20 years could support them.

3. Hindsight Bias

You tend to remember times you were correct and discount your errors. This frequently happens with investors who try to time the market. You might say something like, “I knew things were going bad in 2008 so luckily, I got out of the market.” Yet you neglect to mention the years you stayed in cash and missed out on significant gains.

4. Conservatism Bias

You form a rational view based off the information you have but fail to adjust that view or integrate it with new information as it becomes available. I see this a lot with real estate investors who continue to think that massive leverage will serve them well in a high interest rate environment after 10 years of lower rates.

5. Confirmation Bias

You seek ways to validate your current beliefs, even if they are wrong. For example:

  • Belief: Stocks are too risky and will always cause me to lose money.
  • Confirmation of belief: You see a brief downturn amid many gains.

6. Representativeness

You draw on an experience like your current decision and assume the two you are comparing are about equivalent. I see this a lot when people are picturing their retirement situation and comparing what they will do to what their parents did, like, “Well, Dad never retired so I think I’ll continue to work until I die.”

7. Mental Accounting

You tend to reserve certain money for certain purposes. For example, you might feel like you can’t pay rent because you don’t want to dip into your vacation fund.

8. Cognitive Dissonance

Your attitudes and your actions conflict so you change your attitude. I often see this in investors holding too much cash for their stated risk tolerance. When questioned about their investments being out of line with their risk profile, investors will tend to justify this with other rationales.

9. Self-Attribution Bias

You take credit for your successes and blame external sources for failures. This is particularly common in stock-picking. You may brag about one stock that skyrocketed, while ignoring another stock you picked that went down 90%.

10. Anchoring And Adjustment

You make decisions based on information that should have no impact on the outcome of your choice. For example, it’s predicted to be a particularly rainy year, so you purchase an investment property in Arizona.

11. Outcome Bias

You make decisions based off the outcome of prior events without incorporating current information. For example, you invest in the company of someone who sold a previous one in 2019 and you think there’s a good chance that person can sell the new one in 2023.

12. Framing Bias

How information is presented to you has a vast effect on how you process and respond to it. You may be more apt to act on details gently given to you by a friend at an intimate dinner party than the same information presented by an annoying but well-informed coworker at the office.

13. Recency Bias

You assign the highest importance to the most recent information you receive because you can remember it best. Last year, the market was negative, so you predict there is a high chance of another downturn soon.

How To Avoid These Mistakes

Cognitive mistakes can lead to serious mistakes in personal financial planning. However, it can be difficult to overcome those mistakes because most of them are mechanisms to make us feel better or to give some semblance of order to a confusing world. First, it’s important to be aware of these biases and which ones you may be prone to. Second, consulting a financial professional or other rational sounding board about your decisions is a way to get an objective view and identify potential cognitive mistakes you may be making.

Conclusion

Money can be a source of a lot of fear and biases. Being aware of these influences on your financial decisions and taking steps to mitigate some of the potentially harmful effects can contribute to ultimate financial security.

This informational and educational article does not offer or constitute, and should not be relied upon, as financial or investment advice. Your unique needs, goals and circumstances require the individualized attention of your own financial and other professionals whose advice and services will prevail over any information provided in this article. Equitable Advisors, LLC and its associates and affiliates do not provide tax or legal advice or services.

Cicely Jones (CA Insurance Lic. #:0K81625) offers securities through Equitable Advisors, LLC (NY, NY 212-314-4600), member FINRA, SIPC (Equitable Financial Advisors in MI & TN) and offers annuity and insurance products through Equitable Network, LLC, which conducts business in California as Equitable Network Insurance Agency of California, LLC). Financial Professionals may transact business and/or respond to inquiries only in state(s) in which they are properly qualified. Any compensation that Ms. Jones may receive for the publication of this article is earned separate from, and entirely outside of her capacities with, Equitable Advisors, LLC and Equitable Network, LLC (Equitable Network Insurance Agency of California, LLC). AGE-5917600.1(09/23)(exp.09/25)

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

How to Turn a Cyberattack Into a Strategic Advantage

Investing December 25, 2025

MacBook Air M1 Deal Helps Entrepreneurs Cut Costs Without Sacrificing Performance

Investing December 24, 2025

Fraudster Billed JPMorgan $73 Million for Legal Fees

Investing December 23, 2025

Meet the Company With a Leg Up in the $9 Trillion Flying Car Market

Investing December 22, 2025

This $28 App Does What Your Office Scanner Never Could

Investing December 21, 2025

How Putting Profitability Over Ethics Sabotages Your Success

Investing December 20, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Here’s What Workers Say Matters Most in a Job in 2026 and What They’ll Do to Get It

December 26, 20250 Views

How to Ensure AI Is Working for You and Not Against You

December 25, 20251 Views

How to Turn a Cyberattack Into a Strategic Advantage

December 25, 20252 Views

How to Build an ADA-Compliant Website — and Avoid Legal Fees

December 25, 20252 Views
Don't Miss

Expand Your International Reach With This Special Lifetime Babbel Offer

By News RoomDecember 25, 2025

Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting…

These 5 Common Items Could Get You Flagged by TSA This Holiday Season

December 25, 2025

Don’t Let These 7 Home Trends Tank Your Sale Price

December 25, 2025

AI Won’t Fix Your People Problems — Here’s What I’m Seeing Inside Franchises and Frontline Teams

December 24, 2025
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

20 New Cars That Are Piling up on Dealership Lots (Which Can Mean Lower Prices This Time of Year)

December 26, 2025

Here’s What Workers Say Matters Most in a Job in 2026 and What They’ll Do to Get It

December 26, 2025

How to Ensure AI Is Working for You and Not Against You

December 25, 2025
Most Popular

These 5 Common Items Could Get You Flagged by TSA This Holiday Season

December 25, 202513 Views

The average Manhattan rent just hit a new record of $5,588 a month

August 10, 20234 Views

Lessons From Spending $160,000 of Family Savings to Bootstrap a Startup

December 21, 20253 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Micro Loan Nexus. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.