Let compounding do the work (patience)
The biggest results come from time in, not intensity — if you don’t interrupt it.
Why it works
Compounding is non-intuitive because returns build on prior returns, so the bulk of the payoff arrives late and is fragile to interruption. The behavioral lever is therefore patience and non-interference: most of the gain comes from leaving a good-enough process alone long enough for the curve to bend, not from clever timing.
How to do it
- Pick a process you can sustain for years, not the one that looks most impressive this quarter.
- Make the default "do nothing" — interrupt only on pre-set rules, not on news or mood.
- Measure success by consistency and time horizon, not by recent swings.
Evidence
Compounding is a mathematical fact; the behavioral finding is that frequent intervention and trading tend to reduce, not improve, long-run returns for most people. (observational)
The math of compounding is certain; the claim that patience beats activity is empirically supported on average but not guaranteed in any individual case.
Sources
- Barber & Odean (2000), "Trading Is Hazardous to Your Wealth", Journal of Finance (more trading, lower net returns)
Common mistake
Tinkering. Reacting to short-term swings and resetting the clock, so the late, largest part of the compounding curve never arrives.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you set a long horizon and pre-commit to a "do nothing unless X" rule, then coaches you through the urge to interrupt when markets or moods spike.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).