Page de couverture de Intelligent Money

Intelligent Money

Intelligent Money

Auteur(s): Nathan Pali
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de cet audio

Intelligent Money is a personal finance and behavioral economics podcast about how to think clearly about money in a world designed to confuse you.

This show explores personal finance through history, the psychology of money, and the hidden mechanics of the modern financial system—so you can make better decisions, avoid costly mistakes, and understand what’s really happening behind your bank account, investments, and debt.

Each episode blends behavioral finance, neuroscience of money, financial history, and plain-English explanations of how money actually works. You’ll learn:

  • Why smart people make irrational money decisions
  • How fear, greed, and social pressure shape financial behavior
  • How the brain processes risk, reward, and loss
  • How banks, credit, inflation, and markets really function
  • Why bubbles, crashes, and financial panics repeat
  • How incentives quietly distort financial systems
  • How to build wealth by improving judgment, not chasing returns

This isn’t a stock-tip podcast or a motivational money show. It’s a story-driven guide to intelligent investing, financial decision-making, money psychology, and understanding the systems that quietly shape modern life.

If you’re interested in personal finance, behavioral economics, psychology of money, financial history, how the financial system works, investing behavior, wealth building, and learning how to think better about money—not just manage it—this podcast is for you.

Intelligent Money Because wealth begins with how you think.

© 2026 Intelligent Money All rights reserved.
Finances personnelles Économie
Épisodes
  • Endurance Over Growth: Why Ancient Finance Was About Survival, Not Wealth
    Jan 23 2026

    Modern finance obsesses over growth. Ancient finance focused on endurance. Discover why resilience, not accumulation, was the true measure of wealth for most of human history.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    17 min
Pas encore de commentaire