Financial planning firm Metis Ireland has further expanded its team with three new hires, including a new Private Client Manager,…
Munster
Metis Ireland Virtual Coffee with Mick Kelly You are invited to our next virtual coffee where Carl Widger…
Metis Ireland Virtual Coffee with Bernard Dunne You are invited to our next virtual coffee where Paddy Andrews…
Metis Ireland Virtual Coffee with Róisín Upton You are invited to our next virtual coffee where Carl Widger…
Metis Ireland Virtual Coffee with Dean Rock You are invited to our first virtual coffee of 2021. …
Fit to Perform with Joe O’Connor You are invited to a very special virtual coffee morning on Friday…
I hope you are keeping safe and well right now. It’s been a mad few weeks and as a business…
After some time spent Googling the number 17, there’s not much in the way of memorable facts about it. It’s the atomic number of chlorine, the number of sides in a heptadecagon and the number of syllables in a haiku… but otherwise it’s a pretty ordinary number.
Over the last few months we’ve looked closely at all the different ways our brains try to help us get through life, but end up stepping on our toes when it comes to investment. The purpose of this series has been to show you that while you can’t avoid these quirks (after all, they’ve developed over millions of years in the human psyche) you can at least be informed and spot them at work.
This summer we saw some amazing performances at Glastonbury, but along with the big names, part of the beauty of a music festival is discovering the bands you’ve never heard of. While ‘The sunk cost fallacy’ might sound like an exciting new musical act, or maybe an album title, it’s actually a really dangerous and potentially very expensive behavioural bias.