Dr. Preston Cherry on Financial Psychology

Evan Harp sat down with Dr. Preston Cherry to discuss financial psychology, how it differs from behavioral finance, and how advisors can benefit from incorporating it into their practices.

Evan Harp: My first question is, what does financial psychology mean?

Dr. Preston Cherry: In general, financial psychology is about the way people think, feel, behave, and act with their money. It is the emotions of money; it’s the human side of money, which also reveals people’s stories, their values, their experiences, their cultures. And how those things reveal someone’s relationship with money. That information that is unpacked or uncovered through discussion, the discovery of financial psychology, that’s what informs the money.

Harp: Excellent answer. Another question I have related to that is perhaps a bit in the weeds and technical, but is there a difference between behavioral finance and financial psychology?

Cherry: Yes. So behavioral finance — 1.0, so to speak — the original definition deals with cognitive decision-making with your investments or your money decisions.

I would say that investments and money decisions, particularly with investments, are about choices, right? The keywords are “cognitive or biased.”

Let’s go to behavioral 2.0, which is a euphemism for financial psychology. Behavioral finance 1.0 was limited because it kept you in a cognitive decision box. For instance, if you’re making a decision, like mental accounting, that’s very cognitive. Are you going to put money in this box or in this other box? That’s cognitive, but it doesn’t explain why you put that money into those two boxes from a broader emotional and psychological spectrum.

To compare the two: Behavioral finance generally deals with investments and then money decisions overall — so, savings, etc. With financial psychology, you can apply it to the whole financial planning and personal finance spectrum. And then it gets into those human elements, right? Think, feel, behave. Past, present, future. The emotions. The deeper realm of why.