Personal Finance Essentials
Status Quo 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
This is the cognitive tendency to prefer things to stay the way they are – even when change could lead to clear benefits.
People dislike change because change represents the unknown. The current situation is regarded as safer, easier and less risky. This causes people to hold bad investments, or their default contribution amounts and allocations in their workplace retirement account, simply because switching feels risky. The result: missed opportunities for improvement and higher risks.
The Default Trap
When employers automatically enroll workers in retirement plans, they typically set a default contribution rate – often just 3% of pay – and a default investment. Many workers never change these defaults, not because 3% is the right amount for their situation, but because changing requires action and action feels uncertain. By accepting the default, they’re still making a financial decision – just a passive one. Status quo bias converts inaction into a choice, and that choice often works against your long-term financial goals.
The same applies to rebalancing. Research has found that when investors face a rebalancing opportunity, they often hesitate. As the asset they should buy continues to fall, their tolerance for risk also falls – making them less likely to act at the very moment when acting would be most beneficial. Overcoming status quo bias requires a systematic, rules-based approach that removes the need to make an emotional decision each time.
