Personal Finance Essentials
Mental Accounting Bias
- Back to Investment Management
- Start Now – and Never Stop
- Put Compounding to Work for You
- Maintain a Long-Term Perspective
- The Cost of Procrastination
- The Two Ways to Manage Your Investments
- The Power of Diversification
- Modern Portfolio Theory: A Scientific Approach to Investing
- The Importance of Rebalancing
- The Best Investment Approach of All: Dollar Cost Averaging
- Keeping More of Your Profits via Tax Loss Harvesting
- The Goal of Investing: Financial Security
- The Hidden Threat: Inflation and Taxes
- Understanding Risk and Volatility
- The Psychology of Investing: Overcoming Emotional Errors That Prove Costly
The Psychology of Investing > Mental Accounting Bias
Say you invest $10,000 in a stock and it rises to $15,000. Convinced it will continue to rise, you hold. Later it falls to $8,000 and you sell. How much money did you lose?
If you said $2,000 – the difference between your original investment and the sale price – you’re guilty of mental accounting. The true loss is $7,000: the difference between the peak value and what you received when you sold.
