Hi — I’m Ivo a.k.a Mr.MarketMind

I study how communication shapes human behavior.

After earning my Master’s degree in Communication and Information Sciences, I became increasingly fascinated by the role of stories, language, and psychology in the world of money. The deeper I looked, the clearer it became:

Markets aren’t driven by data alone. They’re driven by narratives. By headlines, opinions, rumors, community beliefs, fears, and hopes.

In a world overflowing with information, clickbait predictions, and viral financial content, it felt like something important was missing: an honest, clear look at how communication influences market behavior.

So I created The Market Mind, a place to explore the psychological and narrative forces behind the movements of money.

What You’ll Find Here

  • Why certain financial stories spread

  • How the internet shapes market sentiment

  • Why investors react the way they do

  • How narratives become self-fulfilling

  • How clarity can protect you from emotional decision-making

No hype.

No predictions.

No sensationalism.

Just thoughtful analysis of how words, stories, and human psychology influence markets more than most people realize.

Why This Matters

Most financial content today is designed to go viral. Not to tell the truth.

I want to help readers understand why markets move, not just which stocks to pick. I want to provide clarity in a world overflowing with noise. And I want to show how communication, not just economics, drives financial behavior.

A Promise to You

Everything I publish here is grounded in:

  1. clarity

  2. curiosity

  3. truth-seeking

  4. psychological insight

  5. intellectual honesty

  6. zero hype

If that sounds like something you’d enjoy, welcome.

Let’s explore the stories behind the numbers together.

User's avatar

Subscribe to The Psychology of Markets

The Psychology of Markets explains how media, social narratives, and communication shape your emotions, and how those emotions drive market behavior. I write about hype, fear, bias, storytelling, and the human side of finance.

People