The Trap of "More" and The Magic of Compounding

in LeoFinance28 days ago

Welcome back to our series on The Psychology of Money. In the last post, we explored how our unique life stories and a dose of random luck shape how we think about money. It’s a great starting point for understanding ourselves and others. But once we start on a financial path, what drives us? This next post dives into two powerful, opposing forces that Morgan Housel covers: the dangerous, insatiable desire for "more," and the slow, quiet, and often misunderstood magic of compounding.

Never Enough: When the Goalpost Keeps Moving

One of the hardest financial skills to learn is getting the goalpost to stop moving. Modern capitalism is incredibly good at two things: generating wealth and generating envy. The problem is, when expectations rise with results, you never feel like you're getting ahead. It’s a dangerous cycle where "more" becomes the only goal.

Housel tells the stories of two incredibly successful men, Rajat Gupta and Bernie Madoff. Both were already unimaginably wealthy through legitimate means before they threw it all away by committing financial crimes. Why would someone with hundreds of millions of dollars risk everything—their freedom, reputation, and family—for even more?

The answer is that they had no sense of "enough."

This happens because the ceiling of social comparison is so high that virtually no one can ever reach it. There's always someone with more. A rookie baseball player making $500,000 a year feels poor next to his teammate Mike Trout, who has a $430 million contract. But Trout might compare himself to a hedge fund manager who makes his annual salary in a single month. It's a battle that can't be won.

The only way to win is to not play the game. The key takeaways are:

Stop the moving goalpost: The hardest financial skill is to stop your lifestyle expectations from growing as fast as your income.

Don't compare: Social comparison is a path to misery. Accept that having "enough" is fine, even if it's less than those around you.

Some things are never worth the risk: Your reputation, independence, family, friends, and happiness are invaluable. Never risk what you have and need for something you don't.

Confounding Compounding: The Power of Time

If the chase for "more" is a fast track to ruin, what's the slow path to building real wealth? The answer is compounding. But our minds are not built to intuitively understand its power.

Housel uses the example of ice ages to explain it. You don't need a massive force to create a huge result. An ice age can be triggered by summers that are just cool enough to not melt the previous winter's snow. That tiny leftover base of ice makes it easier for more snow to accumulate the next year, which reflects more sunlight, which makes things cooler, and on and on until the world is covered in ice.

Money works the same way. The results can be so extraordinary they seem to defy logic.

The ultimate case study is Warren Buffett. His skill is investing, but his secret is time. Of his $84.5 billion net worth, $81.5 billion came after his 65th birthday. Had he started investing at 30 and retired at 60 like a normal person, he would have been worth about $11.9 million—99.9% less than his actual fortune. His success is less about being the single best investor and more about being a very good investor for an incredibly long time (about 75 years).

These two chapters present a clear choice. You can fall into the trap of "never enough," constantly comparing yourself to others and taking bigger and bigger risks to close a gap that can't be closed. Or, you can embrace the slow, counterintuitive power of compounding, where the most important ingredient is time.

Good investing isn’t about earning the highest possible returns, because those often require taking risks that can wipe you out. It’s about earning pretty good returns that you can stick with for the longest period of time. That's where the real wealth is built.

So, what do you think is a bigger challenge for people today: the constant pressure for "more," or the patience required for compounding to work its magic? Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

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