On lesser known investment scams and how you can prevent yourself from falling victim to them.
Behavioral Finance/Psychology
The Ignorance of the Crowd
On the opinions of others and when the crowd can lead you astray.
Do As I Say, Not As I Did
On having consistency between your words and your actions.
Getting Paid to Not Understand It
On financial scammers and how social media platforms profit off of them.
Why Do People Make “Bad” Financial Decisions?
On suboptimal financial choices and why people make them.
Never Look Down the Road Not Taken
On financial regrets and why life never turns out the way you think it should.
The Greatest Investment Quotes [That Everyone Should Know]
The best financial wisdom throughout the ages.
The 11 Best Investing Books [That You Can’t Miss]
Uncover the top 11 best investing books to expand your financial wisdom. From timeless classics to new perspectives with unique insights, our curated list provides essential reading for every investor.
Concentration is Not Your Friend
On concentration risk, the impact it can have on your finances, and how to avoid it.
Proof of Work
On financial bubbles and the most bearish signal in investing.
The Present Defines the Past
On overcoming regret and re-thinking how to judge your past decisions.
When Data Fails
Why data can lead us astray and how to avoid it.
There Will Always Be Sorcerers
On predicting the future and why there will always be a market for forecasters.
Too Good to Be True
On separating fact from fiction in financial markets.
We All Knew This Would Happen
On making investment mistakes even when you know better.
How Do Investors Fail?
Why studying negative outcomes can be better than studying positive outcomes in investing and in life.
Risking, Fast and Slow
On the difference between fast risk and slow risk and why one is more overlooked in investing and in life.
Are We Craving Risk or Losing Reward?
On changing investor behavior and what really drives investment decisions.
The Broken Clock
On survivorship bias in the financial industry and why failed predictions still don’t matter.
Whose Decline is it Anyway?
On accepting personal responsibility for your investment decisions.