Most investors today know more about finance than investors did a generation ago. They understand mutual funds, have heard about diversification and compounding, follow market movements, and can access investment advice within seconds. Yet greater access to information does not always lead to better financial decisions. An investor can understand that markets are volatile and still panic when a portfolio falls. They can know the importance of diversification and still invest heavily in a trending sector. This is where the difference between financial knowledge and financial literacy becomes important.Browse all ET Masterclass programsKnowing about money is not the same as managing itFinancial knowledge is about understanding concepts, while financial literacy is the ability to apply that understanding to actual decisions. Most investors know that buying an investment simply because its price has risen sharply may not be a sound strategy. Yet when markets rally and everyone seems to be making money, the fear of missing out can become difficult to ignore. Similarly, knowing that market corrections are normal does not necessarily make it easier to remain calm when personal wealth is at stake. Investment decisions are shaped not only by information but also by financial goals, risk appetite, time horizon, emotions, and individual circumstances.The real challenge is filtering financial informationThe modern investor’s biggest challenge is no longer access to information. It is knowing how to filter and use it. Market updates, stock recommendations, expert opinions, and financial content are available throughout the day. The real question is whether every piece of information deserves to influence an investment decision. Financial literacy helps investors ask better questions. Instead of simply looking for the investment offering the highest return, they consider the risks involved and whether the opportunity aligns with their financial goals.Why investor behaviour mattersBehaviour plays an important role in investing. Fear can lead to premature exits, greed can encourage excessive risk-taking, and overconfidence can make investors underestimate uncertainty. This is why consuming more financial information alone may not create better investors. The ability to connect financial principles with personal goals and remain disciplined during uncertain markets can be far more valuable than knowing every financial term.Moving from financial knowledge to practical decisionsBridging this gap between information and practical application is what the ET Financial Freedom Masterclass aims to address. Led by financial literacy educator and investment mentor Varun Malhotra, an IIM Ahmedabad alumnus with CFA and CMT credentials and over 13 years of experience in financial education, the hands-on program helps learners develop a practical understanding of wealth creation and financial decision-making.Ultimately, successful investing is rarely about knowing everything. It is about filtering information, understanding risk, managing behaviour, and making decisions aligned with long-term financial goals. Financial knowledge tells investors how money works. Financial literacy helps them decide what to do with that knowledge.Browse all ET Masterclass programs
Financial knowledge isn’t enough: What investors need to make better money decisions
Investors today have more financial information at their fingertips than ever before, yet access to knowledge does not always translate into better decisions. The real difference lies in financial literacy, the ability to filter information, understand risk, manage emotions, and apply financial concepts to real-life choices. Heres why moving from simply knowing about money to using that knowledge effectively can shape better investment decisions.







