Free NewsletterPro Login
S&P 500 6,287 +0.42%
DOW 44,521 -0.18%
NASDAQ 21,103 +0.71%
S&P 500 +12.4%
Briefs Finance Fund +24.8%
JOIN THE FUND →
Home » Deep Briefs »  » The Psychology of Market Crashes: Why Smart Investors Panic and How to Avoid It

The Psychology of Market Crashes: Why Smart Investors Panic and How to Avoid It

Published: Oct 21, 2025 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:

  • Loss aversion makes losses feel 2-3x more painful than equivalent gains feel good
  • Recency bias causes investors to extrapolate recent trends indefinitely into the future
  • Herd mentality drives panic selling when everyone else is selling
  • The amygdala (fear center) hijacks rational decision-making during market stress
  • Simple rules and pre-commitment strategies protect against emotional decisions

Market crashes trigger panic in even the most intelligent investors, not because they lack knowledge, but because human brains are wired to avoid losses at all costs.


What Happens in Your Brain During a Market Crash

Your brain treats financial losses like physical threats.

When you see your portfolio dropping 20%, 30%, or 40%, your amygdala (the brain's alarm system) activates. This is the same part of your brain that fires when you encounter a snake or hear a loud crash.

The amygdala triggers your fight-or-flight response. Your heart rate increases. Stress hormones flood your system. Rational thinking takes a backseat to survival instinct.

This made sense 100,000 years ago when immediate reactions saved lives. It works terribly for investing, where the "threat" is abstract and the best response is often doing nothing.

Why Smart People Make Dumb Decisions

Intelligence doesn't protect you from emotional responses.

A study by Brad Barber and Terrance Odean found that high-IQ investors often perform worse than average investors. Why? Because they're more confident in their ability to time the market and more likely to overtrade during volatile periods.

Smart investors rationalize panic. They find seemingly logical reasons to sell: "The fundamentals have changed," "This time is different," or "I'll buy back in when things stabilize."

But these are justifications for emotional decisions, not rational analysis.


The Psychological Biases That Destroy Returns

Several cognitive biases work together to sabotage your investing during crashes.

Loss Aversion: Losses Hurt More Than Gains Feel Good

Research by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky showed that losses feel approximately 2.5 times worse than equivalent gains feel good.

Losing $10,000 causes more psychological pain than gaining $10,000 causes pleasure. This asymmetry makes you hypersensitive to portfolio declines.

During a crash, this bias screams at you to "make the pain stop" by selling. The temporary relief of selling feels better than the ongoing anxiety of watching losses mount, even if selling locks in those losses permanently.

Recency Bias: The Recent Past Predicts the Future

Your brain gives disproportionate weight to recent events.

After stocks rise for two years, you unconsciously expect them to keep rising. After they fall for two months, you expect endless declines.

During the 2020 COVID crash, when the S&P 500 dropped 34% in March, many investors extrapolated that trajectory. "If we're down 34% in one month, we'll be down 100% by summer!" This thinking ignores that markets don't move linearly.

The reality? The S&P 500 recovered all losses by August and ended 2020 up 16%.

Herd Mentality: Safety in Numbers

Humans evolved to survive in groups. Going against the crowd felt dangerous.

When everyone around you is selling, your brain interprets their behavior as information. "They must know something I don't," you think. The urge to follow the herd becomes overwhelming.

This is why market crashes accelerate. Selling begets more selling. Panic becomes contagious.

In March 2020, retail investors pulled $326 billion from stock funds. Many of those same investors bought back in months later at higher prices, locking in permanent losses.

Availability Bias: Vivid Memories Drive Decisions

You overweight information that's easily recalled, especially dramatic events.

The 2008 financial crisis remains vivid for anyone who lived through it. When markets stumble, those memories flood back. Your brain pattern-matches current conditions to 2008, even when the situations are completely different.

In reality, most market corrections (10%+ declines) don't become crashes. Most crashes don't become financial crises. But your brain remembers the worst-case scenario most clearly.

Anchoring: The Wrong Reference Points

You fixate on arbitrary numbers as reference points.

If your portfolio hit $500,000 at its peak, that becomes your anchor. When it drops to $400,000, you don't see "$400,000 in wealth." You see "$100,000 lost."

This framing makes you desperate to "get back" to $500,000. You might take excessive risks, sell quality investments at lows, or make impulsive decisions chasing quick recovery.

The $500,000 peak was just a moment in time. It's not a promise or a baseline. But your brain treats it like one.


Why Market Crashes Feel Different Than They Are

The actual numbers tell a different story than your emotions.

Historical Context

Since 1950, the S&P 500 has experienced:

  • 37 corrections (declines of 10-20%)
  • 12 bear markets (declines exceeding 20%)
  • Average time to recover from bear markets: 13 months
  • Average gain in the year following a bear market bottom: 40%+

Despite these temporary setbacks, the market has trended upward over every 20-year period in history.

The Recovery You Don't See Coming

Market recoveries happen faster than crashes.

The 2020 crash took 33 days to fall 34%. The recovery to new highs took 126 days. That's a 3.8:1 ratio of recovery time to crash time.

But here's the problem: The recovery often begins when sentiment is most negative. The market bottom on March 23, 2020, occurred when unemployment was spiking and COVID cases were accelerating.

If you wait for "things to stabilize" before buying back in, you miss the recovery. The biggest gains happen in the early stages when everything still feels terrible.

What You Actually Lose vs. What You Feel Like You're Losing

During a 30% market crash, you haven't lost 30% of your future wealth. You've lost 30% of current value.

If your investment horizon is 20 years, a 30% crash followed by historical average returns barely dents your final outcome. You might end with $1.8 million instead of $2 million - but that assumes you panic sell at the bottom.

If you stay invested, the temporary paper loss becomes irrelevant. If you panic sell, you convert a temporary decline into a permanent loss.


How Smart Investors Protect Themselves

Knowing about biases isn't enough. You need systems that override emotional decision-making.

Pre-Commit to Your Strategy

Make decisions when you're calm, not during a crisis.

Write down your investment plan: asset allocation, rebalancing schedule, and specific conditions under which you'll buy or sell. Sign it. Date it. Refer to it when markets crash.

Example: "I will maintain 80% stocks/20% bonds regardless of market conditions. I will rebalance annually or when allocations drift 5%+ from target. I will not make changes based on market volatility or news headlines."

When panic hits, you follow the plan. No new decisions required.

Automate Everything Possible

Remove yourself from the decision-making process.

Set up automatic monthly investments. Enable automatic dividend reinvestment. Schedule annual rebalancing in advance.

During the 2020 crash, investors with automated monthly contributions kept buying. They didn't have to overcome fear because the decision was already made. Those automated purchases bought stocks at 30%+ discounts.

Investors making manual decisions often froze. They stopped contributing or, worse, sold.

Reframe Losses as Discounts

Train your brain to see crashes differently.

When your favorite stock drops 40%, you're not "losing 40%." You're getting a 40% discount on future purchases. The company's fundamentals likely haven't changed proportionally to the price drop.

If you believed in the investment at $100, you should love it at $60. If you don't love it at $60, you probably shouldn't have owned it at $100.

Practice Small Losses

Deliberately expose yourself to minor market volatility.

If you've never experienced a market decline, your first big crash will hit hard. But if you've weathered several 10-15% corrections, a 30% crash feels more manageable.

Don't wait until you have $500,000 invested to test your risk tolerance. Invest smaller amounts early. Experience volatility with $50,000 or $100,000. Learn how you react when the stakes are lower.

Use Time Diversification

Remember your time horizon during crashes.

If you're 35 years old saving for retirement at 65, you have 30 years. A two-year bear market occupies less than 7% of your investment timeline.

Ask yourself: "Will this crash matter in 20 years?" The answer is almost always no. The 2008 crash, the 2000 dot-com bust, the 1987 crash - none of these matter to long-term investors who stayed the course.

Limit Information Intake

Financial news amplifies panic.

During market crashes, cable news runs 24/7 coverage with dramatic graphics, countdown timers, and guest experts predicting doom. Every hour brings new reasons to panic.

Turn it off.

Check your portfolio quarterly or annually, not daily. Disable price alerts. Unfollow financial Twitter during volatile periods.

The less frequently you check, the less likely you are to make emotional decisions. Daily checkers see losses 50% of days. Annual checkers see losses only 25% of years.


The Investors Who Get Rich During Crashes

Market crashes create generational wealth for disciplined investors.

Warren Buffett's Approach

Buffett's famous advice: "Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful."

During the 2008 crisis, while everyone panicked, Buffett invested $5 billion in Goldman Sachs and $3 billion in GE. He later called derivatives "financial weapons of mass destruction" but bought aggressively when prices collapsed.

His secret? He had cash ready and a plan to deploy it when others panicked.

The Rebalancing Advantage

Systematic rebalancing forces you to buy low and sell high.

If your target allocation is 70% stocks/30% bonds, a market crash pushes you to 60% stocks/40% bonds (because stocks fell). Rebalancing requires you to sell bonds and buy stocks - buying when stocks are cheapest.

No emotion required. No market timing needed. Just mechanical rule-following.

Dollar-Cost Averaging Through Crashes

Continuing to invest through crashes dramatically improves long-term returns.

An investor who contributed $500 monthly from 2007-2009 (through the financial crisis) bought shares at prices ranging from $1,500 (pre-crisis) to $700 (crisis bottom) to $1,100 (recovery).

Their average cost per share was far below the pre-crisis peak. When markets recovered, their returns exploded.

The investor who stopped contributing in 2008 missed the lowest prices of a generation.


Your Crash Action Plan

When the next market crash comes, follow these steps:

Immediately:

  1. Stop checking your portfolio daily
  2. Turn off financial news
  3. Review your written investment plan
  4. Remember your time horizon

Within the first week:

  1. Rebalance if your allocation has drifted 5%+ from target
  2. Increase contributions if you have extra cash
  3. Review your emergency fund (is it adequate?)
  4. Talk to a trusted advisor or accountability partner

What not to do:

  1. Don't sell quality investments
  2. Don't try to time the bottom
  3. Don't make major strategy changes
  4. Don't trust your gut feelings
  5. Don't follow the crowd

The Bottom Line

Market crashes exploit hardwired human psychology. Your brain treats portfolio losses as physical threats, triggering panic and poor decisions.

Smart investors don't resist these feelings through willpower alone. They build systems that override emotional responses: written plans, automatic investments, rebalancing rules, and limited information exposure.

The investors who panic and sell during crashes transfer wealth to the investors who stay calm and buy. The difference isn't intelligence, knowledge, or prediction ability. It's preparation and process.

Create your plan now, while markets are calm. Write down your rules. Automate your investments. Prepare for inevitable volatility.

When the next crash comes - and it will come - you won't need to be brave or smart. You'll just need to follow your plan.


More Deep Briefs

Capital Gains Tax in California: A Simple Guide

Top Covered Call ETFs: How to Compare Them

What Are Stock Options? A Plain-English Guide

EBITDA Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It

What Is Taxable Income? A Simple Guide for Investors

What Is a Covered Call? How the Strategy Works

What Is Gross Margin? A Simple Guide for Investors

What Is a Dividend? A Plain-English Guide for Investors

Financial Literacy Books That Actually Build Wealth

What Is a Roth Conversion? A Simple Guide

Trailing Stop Loss: How to Protect Your Gains

5 Types of Wealth: Why Money Is Only One of Them

How to Invest in Private Equity: A Beginner's Guide

What Is a Call Option? A Simple Guide With Examples

EBITDA Formula: How to Calculate It Step by Step

What Is a Stock Option? A Plain-English Guide

Put Option: What It Is and How It Works

Operating Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It

Enterprise Value: What It Is and How to Calculate It

Free Cash Flow: What It Is and Why It Matters

What Is Working Capital? A Simple Guide for Investors

Covered Call: How This Income Strategy Actually Works

Gross Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It

Backdoor Roth IRA: A Simple Guide for High Earners

Mega Backdoor Roth: A Simple Guide for Big Savers

Dividend Calculator: How to Estimate Your Dividend Income

How to Create Multiple Income Streams: A Beginner's Playbook

The 60/40 Portfolio Explained: A Beginner's Guide

How to Invest in Silver: A Beginner's Guide

Asset Allocation by Age: The Right Portfolio Mix at Every Stage of Life

Stablecoin Explained: Why Some Cryptocurrencies Actually Aren't Volatile

Buy Now, Pay Later Risks: Why This "Easy" Payment Method Is Dangerous to Your Wealth

Dividend Payout Ratio: The Secret Metric That Shows If a Stock Is Safe or Risky

Ethereum for Beginners: What It Is and Why Smart Investors Are Paying Attention

Dollar Cost Averaging Strategy: How to Beat Emotion and Build Wealth Steadily

The BRRRR Strategy: How to Build Real Estate Wealth Without Big Money Down

What Is GDP? A Beginner's Guide to Understanding Economic Growth

What Is Blockchain? A Plain English Guide For Investors

How To Negotiate Bills: The Script That Saves You Hundreds A Year

75 15 10 Rule: The Budget That Builds Wealth On Autopilot

How To Rebalance Portfolio: The Strategy That Forces You To Buy Low And Sell High

How To Buy Treasury Bonds: A Beginner's Guide

Forward Vs Futures Contracts: What's The Real Difference?

Alternative Investments Explained: What They Are And Why They Matter

How To Buy Bitcoin For Beginners: 3 Simple Ways

How To Follow Smart Money: The 5 Market Shifts Framework

Insider Trading Meaning: What It Really Is (And Why Some Of It Is Legal)

Core-Satellite Portfolio: The Best of Both Worlds

Bond Ladder Strategy: The Income Plan With Built-In Flexibility

Silver vs Gold Investing: Which One Belongs in Your Portfolio?

What Is a Dividend Reinvestment Plan? The Wealth Snowball Explained

How Tariffs Affect the Stock Market

What Is a 13F Filing? The Smart Money Tracker

Debt-to-Equity Ratio: The Number That Tells You If a Company Is Drowning

Non-Financial Analysis of Stocks: The 4-Step Method

SEC EDGAR Tutorial: The Free Tool the Pros Use

How to Read a 10-Q (Without Losing Your Mind)

What Is a Put Option? A Simple Guide for Investors

What Is Free Cash Flow? How To Find It & Why It's Important

Non Taxable Income: What It Is and Why Investors Care

Nasdaq Index Fund: A Beginner's Guide to Investing in the Nasdaq 100

What Is Wealth? It's Not What Most People Think

Micron Stock: The AI Memory Play Most Investors Are Missing

What Is Working Capital? What Investors Need To Know

What Is a Meme Stock? A Simple Guide for New Investors

Enterprise Value Formula: What It Is and How to Calculate It

Return on Equity: What It Is and How to Use It

Personal Finance Books That Actually Teach You to Build Wealth

How to Reduce Taxable Income: 6 Strategies Investors Actually Use

What Is a High-Yield Savings Account - and Is It Worth It?

Best Stocks to Buy Now: A Smarter Way to Think About It

How to Avoid Capital Gains Tax: 7 Legal Strategies Every Investor Should Know

How to Read a Balance Sheet (And Why Every Investor Should Know How)

What Is a Stock Broker? A Simple Guide for New Investors

Most Volatile Stocks: What They Are and Why They Move

ETF vs Mutual Fund - What's the Difference and Which One Should You Pick?

Nuclear Energy Stocks: Why Smart Money Is Betting on AI's Power Problem

What Is a Stock Symbol? Real Examples & How To Find One

SNDK Stock: The AI Play Most Investors Forgot About

What Is a 401k? Here's What You Actually Need to Know

Call vs. Put Options: What's the Difference and How Do They Work?

What Is Financial Literacy? The Real Skills That Build Wealth

How to Invest in Gold - 3 Simple Ways to Get Started

What Is a Dividend? What Beginner Investors Need To Know

What Time Does the Stock Market Open?

How to Buy Stocks: The 5-Step Plan To Stock Market Investing

What Is EBITDA? A Simple Guide for Investors

RDW Stock: Is Redwire Worth Watching in 2026?

How to Invest in the Nasdaq (Without Picking a Single Stock)

What Is a Cash Flow Statement? (And Why Investors Should Actually Care About It)

How to Retire a Millionaire: The 6 Step Plan For Investors

11 Ways to (Legally) Pay Less Taxes

MO Stock: The Dividend Stock The Market May Be Missing

How Much Should You Invest in Stocks? Here's Your Actual Answer

Trading vs Investing: Which One Actually Builds Wealth?

What Is a Balance Sheet? The Key Items Investors Should Look For

How To Make Money While You Sleep: 13 Passive Investing Strategies Anyone Can Do

What Is a Stock Market Correction? Here's What It Actually Means

CB Stock: Why Chubb Could Be This Year’s Quiet Winner

Do You Have To Pay Taxes on Stocks: What Every Investor Needs to Know

1 2 3

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Join Free

Blogs

June 18, 2026
What Is a Stop Loss Order? A Simple Guide
  • A stop loss order automatically sells a stock once it falls to a price you set.
  • It's a tool to cap losses or lock in gains without watching the market all day.
  • It works best for active strategies, and can backfire if used carelessly on long-term holdings.
Read More
June 18, 2026
Best S&P 500 Index Fund: How to Choose One
  • The best S&P 500 index fund for most investors is simply the cheapest, most established one that tracks the index well.
  • Funds like VOO, IVV, and SPY all hold the same 500 companies, so the biggest difference is the fee.
  • Pick one, automate your buys, and let time do the heavy lifting.
Read More
June 17, 2026
What Are Penny Stocks? Risks and Rewards Explained
  • Penny stocks are very low-priced shares of very small companies, often trading for just a few dollars or less.
  • They promise huge gains but carry huge risks: low liquidity, high failure rates, and wild price swings.
  • Most investors are better served by quality companies and funds than by chasing cheap shares.
Read More
June 17, 2026
Best Stocks for Beginners With Little Money
  • The best stocks for beginners with little money usually aren't individual stocks at all - they're low-cost index funds.
  • You can start with $100 or less and use small, regular investments to build wealth over time.
  • Focus on diversification and consistency, not on picking the next big winner.
Read More
June 16, 2026
Tech Stocks: A Simple Guide for New Investors
  • Tech stocks are companies in the information technology and related sectors, from software to chips to the internet giants.
  • They've driven much of the market's growth, but they can be volatile and richly valued.
  • The smart approach is to understand what you own and not let one sector run your whole portfolio.
Read More
June 16, 2026
What Is a Joint Stock Company? A Simple Guide
  • A joint stock company is a business owned by many people, each holding shares of stock that represent a slice of ownership.
  • It's the basic idea behind every public company you can buy on the stock market today.
  • Owning a share makes you a part-owner, entitled to a piece of the profits and growth.
Read More
June 16, 2026
Capital Gains Tax in California: A Simple Guide
  • Capital gains tax is what you owe when you sell an investment for more than you paid for it.
  • How long you held it matters: long-term gains are taxed more gently than short-term gains at the federal level.
  • Smart investors lower the bill with tools like tax-loss harvesting and holding for the long run.
Read More
June 15, 2026
Top Covered Call ETFs: How to Compare Them
  • Top covered call ETFs are income funds that own stocks and sell call options against them to generate steady cash.
  • The best one for you is the fund whose income, holdings, and fees fit your goals, not simply the one with the flashiest yield.
  • They all share one trade-off: more income today, less upside in a big rally.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Are Stock Options? A Plain-English Guide
  • Stock options are contracts that give you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a stock at a set price by a set date.
  • There are two kinds: calls (the right to buy) and puts (the right to sell).
  • Options can multiply gains or wipe out your money fast, so they suit investors who already know the basics.
Read More
June 15, 2026
EBITDA Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It
  • EBITDA margin measures how much core profit a company keeps from each dollar of sales, before interest, taxes, and accounting deductions.
  • The formula is EBITDA divided by revenue, shown as a percent.
  • A higher, steadier EBITDA margin usually signals a more efficient, more durable business.
Read More
1 2 3 23
Share via
Copy link