How Biases Affect Your Portfolio

Minimize your money-related mistakes by learning about the investing biases rooted in your experiences, background, culture, and gender.

If you're a young, single man from Oklahoma, and you've been burned in the stock market, you should read this column carefully. But even if you're not, read on. You can minimize money-related mistakes by learning about investing biases that are rooted in your experiences, background, culture and even gender.

A market massacre, such as the one that occurred in 2008, can have a profound effect on your investing psyche. That is especially so if you experience the disaster early in life. A study called "Depression Babies: Do Macroeconomic Experiences Affect Risk-Taking?" found that in the 1980s, younger Americans -- those who came of age during the stagnant stock market of the 1970s -- were less likely than older people to buy stocks. The younger group remained disenchanted for decades, according to the study's authors, Ulrike Malmendier, of the University of California at Berkeley, and Stefan Nagel, of Stanford University. Of course, anyone who avoided stocks starting in the early 1980s missed a monumental, 20-year bull market.

Subscribe to Kiplinger’s Personal Finance

Be a smarter, better informed investor.

Save up to 74%
https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/hwgJ7osrMtUWhk5koeVme7-200-80.png

Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free E-Newsletters

Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more - straight to your e-mail.

Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice - straight to your e-mail.

Sign up

To continue reading this article
please register for free

This is different from signing in to your print subscription


Why am I seeing this? Find out more here

Bob Frick
Senior Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance