The Folly of Trusting Your Own Mind With Money | Dr. Preet Banerjee

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Why does doing more research make investors more confident in the wrong decision, why do warning labels often invite the very risk they're meant to prevent, and why might a friendlier robo-advisor actually produce worse investing behavior?

In this episode of Insight is Capital™, Pierre Daillie sits down with Dr. Preet Banerjee — personal finance expert, founder of Money School, and Globe and Mail behavioural finance columnist, to unpack the psychological wiring beneath everyday investing decisions. From the "cue recall simulation loop" that distorts how investors remember their own portfolio returns, to research showing that useless new information makes people more confident (not more correct), to the counterintuitive finding that warning labels can make risky products more desirable, this conversation maps the gap between what investors think they're doing with their money and what's actually steering the wheel. Preet also explains why robo-advisors with more "human" interfaces see worse adherence to their own advice, how disclosure and judgement anxiety shape client behaviour, and why clients using ChatGPT before a meeting may end up valuing their advisor's guidance more, not less.

Chapters

00:00 Cold Open: The Hidden Psychology of Money
01:26 Meet Dr. Preet Banerjee
01:58 Life in London and the Advisor App Store
07:23 From Neuroscience to Behavioral Finance: Preet's Path
12:48 The Confidence Trap: Why More Research Backfires
18:40 Red Teaming Your Own Investment Decisions
20:26 Why You Misremember Your Portfolio's Past Performance
23:05 DIY Investing vs. Evidence-Based Strategies
26:42 Loss Aversion and the Scars of Your First Market Crash
28:42 Journaling as a Behavioral Antidote
32:11 The Parental Advisory Effect: Why Warnings Backfire
37:59 Could an Investment Literacy Test Protect DIY Investors?
40:15 The Regulatory Tightrope Between Risk and Access
42:16 Sports Betting, Retirement Savings, and Cautionary Data
44:28 The Robo-Advisor Paradox: Warmer Interfaces, Worse Behavior
45:59 Disclosure Anxiety, Judgment Anxiety, and Advisor Trust
49:31 Why Personal Finance Is 90% Psychology
51:30 The Dark Side of Investing Democratization
53:49 The Dalbar Study and the Behavior Gap
54:11 ChatGPT, Advisors, and the Future of Financial Advice
58:25 Closing Thoughts

#BehavioralFinance #InvestorPsychology #PersonalFinance #InvestingTips #WealthManagement #FinancialAdvisor #PreetBanerjee #InsightIsCapital #DIYInvesting #RoboAdvisor #FinTech #InvestingMindset #MoneyPsychology #FinancialLiteracy #StockMarket #BehaviorGap

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