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One of the costliest habits in investing is the search for certainty.
You see it whenever investors declare that a stock is “definitely” going higher, that interest rates “have to” fall, or that the market will “surely” recover by year-end. The language sounds confident. It feels decisive.
But in investing, certainty is often just marketing or overconfidence dressed up as insight.
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The future does not unfold in straight, predictable lines. It arrives through probabilities, surprises and shifting conditions. Yet the human brain craves simple stories, quick conclusions and firm answers.
That tendency helps us move through everyday life efficiently. But when the stakes are high, our psychological inclination to act quickly and decisively can be a source of bad choices.
Why mental shortcuts distort your judgment
Years ago, Nobel Prize-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman gave us a helpful framework for understanding this tension. He described two modes of thinking: System 1 and System 2.
System 1 is fast, intuitive and automatic. It is the mind’s autopilot. It helps you react quickly, recognize patterns and make split-second judgments.
System 2 is slower, more deliberate and more analytical. It is the part of the mind that pauses, examines assumptions and weighs alternatives. System 2 requires more energy, so we instinctively resist using it.
Both are essential. But when it comes to investing and major life decisions, System 1 often barges in with more confidence than accuracy — that’s where trouble begins.
Investors like to think their decisions are driven by discipline and evidence. In reality, judgment is often distorted by mental shortcuts.
Take confirmation bias. Once people become enthusiastic about a company, a sector or a market narrative, they begin gathering evidence that supports their view while ignoring evidence that challenges it. They read bullish research, consume optimistic commentary and dismiss warning signs as noise.
Then there is anchoring bias. Investors often cling to an old reference point — the price they paid for a stock, its former high or an analyst’s target — even after the facts have changed. A stock that has fallen from $300 to $90 can look irresistibly “cheap,” not because the fundamentals remain attractive, but because the old price still dominates the mind.
Overconfidence may be the most expensive bias of all. A few successful calls can convince investors that skill, rather than luck or favorable market conditions, is driving their results.
That illusion often leads to larger bets, weaker diversification and a dangerous sense of control over outcomes that may inherently be unpredictable.
So how do you push back against these biases?
By shifting from certainty to probability.
Instead of asking, “What will happen?” ask, “What is likely to happen, what else could happen, and how would each outcome affect me?”
That small change in framing is deceptively powerful. It forces System 2 to step in. It slows the rush to judgment. And it creates room for nuance, humility and better preparation.
Absolutes vs probabilities
Consider the difference between these two ways of thinking.
An absolute thinker says:
- The S&P500 will end 2026 at 7,400
- The federal funds rate will be 3.25% on December 31, 2026
- Oil will trade at $70 a barrel
A probabilistic thinker says:
- There is a 60% chance the S&P 500 ends 2026 above 7,400, a 25% chance it finishes between 7000 and 7400, and a 15% chance of a recession or market shock drives it below 6000
- There is a 50% chance that by December 2026, the federal funds rate ends near 3.25%, a 30% chance stubborn inflation keeps rates higher that 3.75%, and a 20% chance weaker growth pushes rates below 2.75%
- There is a 55% chance oil trades near $70 a barrel in December 2026, a 25% chance supply shocks or geopolitical conflict sends it above $100, and a 20% chance weakening demand pulls it below $60
These numbers are not meant to suggest false precision. These probabilities are meant to illustrate a mental model and a better way of thinking. The disciplined investor does not pretend to know exactly what will happen. Instead, they consider multiple plausible outcomes, assign rough odds to each and prepare accordingly.
The second (probabilistic) framework is not weaker. It is wiser.
Probabilistic thinking does not mean indecision. It means accepting reality as it is: Uncertain, dynamic and resistant to tidy forecasts. It means building portfolios, plans and expectations that can withstand more than one future.
Smarter decision-making
That mindset matters beyond investing, too. It improves career decisions, business strategy, family planning and nearly every meaningful choice in life.
The goal is not to eliminate bias entirely. That is impossible. The goal is to recognize when instinct is oversimplifying a complex situation and to deliberately slow down when the consequences matter.
In practice, that often means asking better questions. Here is an eight-question checklist for smarter decision-making:
1. What probability can I assign to each outcome?
2. What assumptions am I making?
3. What evidence would prove me wrong?
4. What are the most plausible alternative outcomes?
5. If I am wrong, how costly will it be?
6. Is my portfolio prepared for more than one scenario?
7. How can I integrate new information into my assumptions and forecast?
8. What can I learn from the actual outcome about my process and assumption?
These questions do not give us certainty. They give us something more valuable: Better judgment.
No investor can predict the future with consistent precision. The real advantage may lie elsewhere. It may lie in avoiding fragile decisions, managing downside risk and preparing intelligently for a range of outcomes.
In the end, wealth is rarely built by being right all the time. It is built by thinking clearly, staying humble and being wrong less disastrously.
That is true in markets. And it is true in life.
To learn more about effective decision-making and other related topics, you can order Feroz Ansari’s upcoming book, The Wisdom and Wealth Solution.

