{"id":24813,"date":"2016-06-16T10:17:05","date_gmt":"2016-06-16T02:17:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/?p=24813"},"modified":"2021-07-28T10:44:37","modified_gmt":"2021-07-28T02:44:37","slug":"the-reason-why-you-are-overspending-failing-in-your-investment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/the-reason-why-you-are-overspending-failing-in-your-investment","title":{"rendered":"The Reason Why You Are Overspending & Failing In Your Investment"},"content":{"rendered":"
What would you do if you lose your RM16 ticket to the latest superhero movie before you got in the theatre?<\/p>\n
So, you\u2019ve lost your movie ticket between the popcorn stand and the door to the theatre. Like any cinema, this one has no record of your purchase, and you\u2019re told that you\u2019ll need to buy another ticket to get your X-Men fix.<\/p>\n
The question is: Would you buy another ticket \u2013 in effect doubling the cost of seeing the movie \u2013 or just go home and watch television?<\/p>\n
In a landmark 1984 study by behavioural finance psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, only 46% of the 200 respondents would have purchased another ticket.<\/p>\n
How about we change the scenario a little.<\/p>\n
You lost RM16 on the way to the theatre \u2013 before buying the movie ticket. According to the same study, a massive 88% said they would get another RM16 to buy the ticket to see the immortal Apocalypse recruits other mutants in X-Men.<\/p>\n
Why the different reaction to the same cost of watching a movie? Both cases involved a total of RM32.<\/p>\n
However, nearly twice as many respondents were happy to spend another RM16 after losing that much in cash, versus losing a movie ticket that was worth as much.<\/p>\n
The study concluded that this apparent contradiction was because in our minds, we placed only RM16 into our mental \u201cmovie ticket account.\u201d Losing the first ticket meant that buying another RM16 ticket would result in RM32 being debited from this mental account.<\/p>\n
On the other hand, the RM16 lost on the way to the cinema was not considered part of this account. So we don\u2019t feel as bad purchasing a ticket as only RM16 will remain debited from the movie ticket account.<\/p>\n
Sounds mental? Yes, but it\u2019s a pretty common way of thinking.<\/p>\n
We tend to put our money into separate categories in our brains, and give these categories different values based on the source of the funds, and what we intend to do with it. This is called mental accounting bias and it leads to us make irrational spending decisions.<\/p>\n
Now let\u2019s reverse this to unexpected money we pocket.<\/p>\n