What Is a Mutual Fund and How Does It Work?
Mutual funds are the investment vehicle most Americans use without fully understanding. Here’s a plain-English explanation of what they are, how they work, what they cost, and when they make sense.
Mutual funds are the investment vehicle most Americans use without fully understanding. Here’s a plain-English explanation of what they are, how they work, what they cost, and when they make sense.
Most financial literacy programmes produce little lasting change in financial behaviour. That’s not a failure of the content — it’s a fundamental misunderstanding of what drives financial decisions. Here’s what the evidence says actually works.
Everyone knows they should have three to six months of expenses saved. Far fewer people have it. Here’s a practical guide to building an emergency fund even when starting from zero — and where to keep it once you have it.
We don’t just make financial decisions to maximise outcomes — we make them to minimise future regret. Understanding regret aversion reveals why we make certain choices that look irrational on paper but feel compelling in practice.
Most people treat insurance as a necessary expense to minimise. The right framework is very different: insurance is a tool for transferring specific financial risks you can’t afford to absorb. Here’s how to think about every policy you hold.
Risk tolerance questionnaires ask how you’d feel about a 20% portfolio drop. The real question is how you’d actually behave. Most people discover the gap between stated and actual risk tolerance the hard way. Here’s how to get it right before that happens.
Your credit report is the foundation of your credit score — but most Americans have never read one. Here’s what’s in it, where to get it for free, and how to dispute errors that may be costing you money.
Once we own something, we value it more than we would if we were buying it fresh. The endowment effect is one of the most reliably demonstrated biases in behavioural economics — and it costs people real money in predictable ways.
Claiming Social Security at 62 versus 70 produces dramatically different lifetime income outcomes. Here’s the actual math, the break-even analysis, and the factors that should drive your specific decision.
Lifestyle creep is the gradual expansion of spending that tends to accompany rising income — and it’s one of the primary reasons people feel perpetually stretched despite earning more every year. Here’s how it works and how to interrupt it.