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    IMF upgrades global growth forecast, citing U.S. resilience and policy support in China

    The International Monetary Fund upgraded its global growth forecast for 2024 by 0.2 percentage points, to 3.1%.
    Resilience in the U.S., Chinese fiscal stimulus and a strong performance by large emerging market economies all contributed to the slightly brighter picture.
    There are new risks to commodities and supply chains from Middle East volatility, but inflation globally has fallen faster than expected.

    Buildings in Pudong’s Lujiazui Financial District in Shanghai, China, on Monday, Jan. 29, 2024. 
    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday nudged its global growth forecast higher, citing the unexpected strength of the U.S. economy and fiscal support measures in China.
    It now sees global growth in 2024 at 3.1%, up 0.2 percentage points from its prior October projection, followed by 3.2% expansion in 2025.

    Large emerging market economies including Brazil, India and Russia have also performed better than previously thought.
    The IMF believes there is now a reduced likelihood of a so-called “hard landing,” an economic contraction following a period of strong growth, despite new risks from commodity price spikes and supply chain issues due to geopolitical volatility in the Middle East.
    It forecasts growth this year of 2.1% in the U.S., 0.9% in both the euro zone and Japan, and 0.6% in the United Kingdom.
    “What we’ve seen is a very resilient global economy in the second half of last year, and that’s going to carry over into 2024,” the IMF’s chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, told CNBC’s Karen Tso on Tuesday.

    “This is a combination of strong demand in some of these countries, private consumption, government spending. But also, and this is quite important in the current context, a supply component as well … So very strong labor markets, supply chain frictions that have been easing, and the decline in energy and commodity prices.”

    The latest official figures showed the U.S. economy tearing past economists’ expectations in the fourth quarter, with growth of 3.3%.
    China has faced a host of issues over the last year, including a disappointing rebound in post-pandemic spending, concerns over deflation and an ongoing property sector crisis. The government has rolled out a host of stimulus measures in response, contributing to the IMF’s upgrade.
    However, the IMF’s forecasts remain below the global growth average between 2000 and 2019 of 3.8%. Higher interest rates, the withdrawal of some fiscal support programs and low productivity growth continue to weigh, the institution said.

    But restrictive monetary policy has led to inflation falling faster than expected in most regions, which Gourinchas called the “other piece of good news” in Tuesday’s report. The IMF sees global inflation at 5.8% in 2024 and 4.4% in 2025. In advanced economies, that falls to 2.6% this year and 2% next year.
    “The battle against inflation is being won, and we have a higher likelihood of a soft landing. So that sets the stage for central banks, the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, and others, to start easing their policy rates, once we know for sure that we are on that path,” Gourinchas said.
    “The projection right now is that central banks are going to be waiting to get a little bit more data, they are going meeting by meeting, they are data dependent, confirming that we are on that path. That’s the baseline. And then if we are, then by the second half of the year we’ll see rate cuts,” he continued.
    While central banks must not ease too early, there is also a risk coming into sight of policy remaining too tight for too long which would slow growth and bring inflation below 2% in advanced economies, Gourinchas added. More

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    Tom Brady is merging his nutrition and apparel brands with training company Nobull

    Tom Brady is merging his health and nutrition and apparel brands with Nobull.
    Brady will become the No. 2 shareholder of Nobull.
    Nobull was purchased in 2023 by beverage veteran Mike Repole.

    Tom Brady will become the No. 2 shareholder of Nobull.
    Courtesy: Nobull

    Seven-time Super Bowl Champion Tom Brady is merging his health and nutrition company, TB12, and his apparel company, Brady, with training brand Nobull.
    As part of the deal, Brady will become the No. 2 shareholder in Nobull, behind BodyArmor founder Mike Repole who bought the company last year.

    Terms of the deal were not provided.
    Nobull was founded in 2015 by former Reebok executives Marcus Wilson and Michael Schaeffer. The Boston-based company employs about 100 people across the U.S., U.K. and China, and sells its sneakers and apparel primarily online.
    Under the merger, the company will continue to operate under the brand name Nobull and aims to become a complete wellness company.
    “I wanted to do something really big,” Repole said about the deal with Brady. “I think Nobull has a chance here to be this epic historic brand — playing in a space of health and wellness, through sneakers, apparel, nutrition mentality and really helping people with adversity, resilience, grit.”

    Tom Brady is merging TB12 and the Brady brand with training company Nobull.
    Courtesy: Nobull

    Repole, who made his fortune turning beverage brands into household names, purchased a majority stake in Nobull in July. His track record includes selling BodyArmor to Coca-Cola for $5.6 billion in 2021, in addition to creating the Vitaminwater and Smartwater brands, which he also sold to Coca-Cola in 2007.

    He aims to take Nobull, a $250 million brand, and turn it into a billion-dollar powerhouse. Brady, he said, can help get him there.
    “I think the piece that really resonates with me is our mindset and how we want to inspire others through action and through challenging them to be the best they can possibly be for themselves,” Brady told CNBC.
    The deal will include footwear, apparel and nutrition products previously housed under the TB12 and Brady brands.
    Brady was previously an Under Armour-endorsed athlete, with an apparel and footwear deal with the company. That deal has since ended.
    For Brady, who says he’s “happily retired” and looking forward to the upcoming Super Bowl matchup, the deal offers a way to ensure his brand and loyal fanbase will continue to have influence.
    “I thought it was the best opportunity for myself and the brands that I’ve been a part of to make a difference,” Brady said.
    Repole said he started talking with Brady nearly two years ago and almost immediately found common ground, despite their distinct backgrounds and successes.
    “We found that even though we go about things a little differently, we get to the same place and we have the same core values,” he said. “Winning with others is important. Having success with others, making ourselves better versions of ourselves, pushing our teammates, challenging our teammates to be better is very important to us.”Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO: More

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    Stocks are the ‘asset class of choice’ as markets are now used to bad news, strategist says

    As investors enter an unprecedented year for elections around the world amid multiple large-scale conflicts at risk of further escalation, Beat Wittmann, partner at Porta Advisors, acknowledged that “politics will remain difficult and confusing,” but that markets will likely be sanguine.
    Wittmann also said the outcome of November’s election would be “pretty irrelevant for markets, quite frankly.”

    Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., January 29, 2024.
    Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters

    Geopolitical risks may be mounting, but stocks are still the “asset class of choice,” according to Beat Wittmann, partner at Porta Advisors, who also said the outcome of the U.S. election in November would be “pretty irrelevant” for markets.
    As investors enter an unprecedented year for elections around the world amid multiple large-scale conflicts at risk of further escalation, Wittmann acknowledged that “politics will remain difficult and confusing,” but that markets will likely be sanguine.

    “There are two transmission mechanisms. One is energy prices — will the trouble in the Middle East be a transmission into higher energy prices, or the war in Eastern Europe? Not really, if you look at how energy prices have developed,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Tuesday.
    “And the second thing is really international trade and trade routes. We have seen it brutally in Covid and we see a bit of it of course — traffic through Suez, insurance companies putting up costs, etc.— but that’s all digestible.”

    He added that markets had “gotten used to trouble in geopolitics” over the last five years, so the impact on asset prices of any further bad news would be somewhat limited.
    Last year offers some support to this theory. Despite the breakout of the Israel-Hamas war and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine showing no sign of abating, along with a host of other simmering geopolitical tensions around the world, the S&P 500 gained 24% in 2023.
    However, much of the momentum was driven by the outstanding performance of the so-called “Magnificent Seven” mega-cap tech stocks, leading to some concerns among investors about concentration risk. Wittmann acknowledged that risk, but remains bullish about broader upside potential in stocks.

    “I think it’s on track, of course expectations get ever higher, so there will be at some stage disappointments here and there, but stock-specific.”

    “But technology clearly has real mania potential, and there could be even a melt-up in the market led by technology.”
    Monetary policy emerged as the key driver of a huge rally toward the end of the year after the Federal Reserve signaled that at least three interest rate cuts were on the table in 2024, offering a particular boost for high-growth stocks. The Fed releases its next monetary policy decision and forward guidance on Wednesday.
    Wittmann suggested the only risk to this momentum would be if inflation proves stickier than the Fed expects because of some unforeseen geopolitical risk coming into play, resulting in interest rates being kept higher for longer.

    But he believes that would be a problem only for fixed income and the growth stocks that have enjoyed much of the recent rally, and would be positive for value stocks — those trading at a discount relative to their financial fundamentals — meaning if “in any doubt, I think equities are really the asset class of choice.”

    U.S. election ‘irrelevant’ for markets

    Much of the conversation at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, focused on the possibility of Donald Trump returning to the White House, and whether his erratic decision-making and radical policy proposals, such as sweeping 10% tariffs on all imports, would be material for investors.
    Wittmann said the outcome of November’s election would be “pretty irrelevant for markets, quite frankly.”
    “If you have such a strong position as an economy, which the U.S. has in a supreme way, controlling and basically dominating finance, dominating technology, dominating aerospace defense, having achieved strategic autonomy in energy, for example, then it’s really difficult, so no matter whether he gets elected or not, he will also not be able to surprise,” he said. More

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    Alibaba-backed Xreal, rival to Apple’s Vision Pro, claims it’s now an AR glasses unicorn

    Alibaba-backed augmented reality glasses company Xreal said it received $60 million in new funding, giving the company a valuation of more than $1 billion.
    Augmented reality (AR) technology allows digital images to be imposed over the real world.
    Xreal’s latest AR glasses model, the Air 2 Ultra, is set to start shipping in March and is available for pre-order at $699, a fraction of Apple’s price tag of around $3,500 for the Vision Pro.

    Xreal Air 2 in action. Xreal’s augmented reality glasses is compatible with gaming consoles and can allow users to play games on a large virtual screen

    BEIJING — Alibaba-backed augmented reality glasses company Xreal said Monday it received $60 million in new funding, giving the company a valuation of more than $1 billion.
    That valuation gives the startup unicorn status, the first in the AR glasses industry, Xreal claimed. It did not share who participated in the latest funding round.

    Augmented reality (AR) technology allows digital images to be imposed over the real world.
    Apple’s Vision Pro virtual reality headset, set for release in the U.S. on Feb. 2, also allows users to see the real world using what the company calls “spatial computing” technology.
    Xreal’s latest AR glasses model, the Air 2 Ultra, is set to start shipping in March. It is available for pre-order at $699, a fraction of Apple’s price tag of around $3,500 for the Vision Pro.
    On Jan. 8, Xreal said it had shipped 350,000 AR glasses since the company was launched in 2017. That’s compared to 250,000 units as of October, and 150,000 units as of May.
    The startup said it plans to use the latest funding for research and development, as well as factory expansion. Total backing from investors has now reached $300 million, Xreal said.
    — CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report. More

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    Retail return fraud is rising as consumers send back purchases in droves

    Retail return fraud is on the rise, and companies are watching closely as many consumers have until the end of January to send back unwanted holiday gifts.
    Retailers expect 16.5%, or $24.5 billion worth, of holiday returns to be fraudulent this year, according to a survey by Appriss Retail and the National Retail Federation.
    Tactics include people saying they never received certain items, returning a different item than they bought or sending back a stolen product.

    As retailers tried to win shoppers and boost sales in recent years, they made their online return policies more lenient than ever.
    But those changes have come at a cost.

    As more consumers shop online and send back more of those orders, retailers have moved to crack down on fraud. In some cases, shoppers can send back different items than the ones they bought, return stolen items or claim a purchase never got delivered when it really did.
    Retailers estimate 13.7% of returns, or $101 billion worth, were fraudulent last year, according to a survey by Appriss Retail and the National Retail Federation. The share of returns expected to be fraudulent during the peak holiday season was even higher at 16.5%, or $24.5 billion worth, the survey found.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Those goods are still flowing back in, as many retailers extend return windows for purchases made in November and December through the end of January. As retailers field those returns, fraud has become their top concern, industry experts said.
    “Fraud is No. 1, and it’s not even close to No. 2,” said Vijay Ramachandran, vice president of go-to-market enablement and experience at shipping and mailing firm Pitney Bowes.
    Processing an online return is already a costly proposition: It averages 21% of an order’s value, according to a Pitney Bowes survey of 168 retailers. Half the respondent companies paid more than 21%.

    The cost of processing a return is increasing not only due to higher shipping and processing costs, but also because of rising fraud, industry experts said. As those tactics spread, many companies have started to make it tougher to return items.
    “In cases where fraud is on the rise, like this year, what we’ve seen in the data, retailers are forced to, at minimum, change their policies slightly to accommodate for that potential fraud and abuse,” according to Michael Osborne, CEO of Appriss Retail, which helps companies manage theft and fraud. “It does increase their costs and essentially erode their margin.”
    Saks CEO Marc Metrick said at the NRF Big Show in mid-January that while the retailer has long received legitimate complaints from customers about missing items, fraudulent “merchandise not received” complaints to the company have more than doubled over the past several years.
    That’s just one fraudulent return tactic.
    Shipping back an empty box or a different item than was received, such as a box of bricks instead of a television, is the most common form of return fraud, according to Pitney Bowes’ Ramachandran. In other cases, fraudsters could return stolen goods. In another example, they could also dig through trash to find a receipt, then go into that store, find that product and take it to the return desk.
    “There are examples of price arbitrage where someone will buy a product on sale or promotion, and then return it for full price in order to get the delta of that benefit back to them, basically stealing those extra dollars,” Osborne of Appriss Retail said.
    “Credit laundering, too, where they’re taking things like gift cards or store credit and using that to buy a product, then returning it and putting that money back onto a different card, allowing them to take the money from potentially a stolen or fraudulently obtained gift card or credit,” he added.
    Appriss Retail gave CNBC an example of one person who netted upward of $224,000 by fraudulently returning more than 1,000 items to 215 stores across multiple states, using a variety of return tactics.

    Return abuse is more common

    There’s also less egregious behavior, often considered return abuse rather than fraud. It includes “bracketing” or “wardrobing.”
    “Bracketing” is where a shopper buys more than one size or color with the intent of returning whichever doesn’t work for them. While not fraud, it still puts a return expense on the retailer. “Wardrobing,” when shoppers buy an item, use it and then return it, is considered a bigger issue.
    More than half, or 56%, of consumers confess to “wardrobing,” according to a survey from fraud prevention firm Forter. One in four consumers said they bought an item during the 2023 holiday season with the intent to return it after use.
    Forter Head of Risk Doriel Abrahams said premeditated, intentional returns after use are especially problematic.
    Just under half, or 47%, of those who planned to “wardrobe” during the holiday season were between the ages of 18 and 34, according to Forter. “Wardrobing” happens with lots of products, not just clothing.
    “I have heard of people, every time they move an apartment, they buy tools, drills, whatever, put up the shelves and the things they need, and then just send it back,” Abrahams said.

    How retailers are combating return fraud

    Elevators inside an Ikea store in Doral, Miami.
    Jeff Greenberg | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    Bad actors that commit return fraud are hurting honest shoppers as retailers make their policies stricter to prevent abuses, those who track the tactics said. 
    “It’s really putting a damper on your own experience, because right now, I look at it like the Plexiglas at the drugstore. We’re having to do a version of that on our website, we’re adding friction to the customer experience, to even the good actors” Saks’ Metrick said. “That’s a problem for us, and we’re going to have to fix it.”
    Return fraud has caused several retailers to tighten policies for all consumers. Some even use artificial intelligence and other technology to personalize their return policies, which could vary for each individual.
    “Certain retailers offer the ability for you to have different return windows based on your known history with that retailer, essentially equivalent to a loyalty program status level,” said Osborne. He said some companies such as Amazon have adopted that strategy, and “that’s where other retailers need to go.”
    Amazon did not directly say whether it’s seeing more return fraud. Company spokesperson Kristina Pressentin said, “Amazon continues to make progress in identifying and stopping fraud before it happens” and that it “uses advanced machine learning models to proactively detect and prevent fraud, as well as employs specialized teams dedicated to detecting, investigating and stopping fraud.”
    Companies have tried to keep consumers happy in an increasingly competitive retail environment by offering lenient return policies. Nearly three-fourths, or 73%, of shoppers choose a retailer based on the return experience and 58% want a smooth, no-questions-asked return experience across channels, according to a survey by Appriss Retail and Incisiv.
    But companies have to try to strike a delicate balance between appeasing those customers and trying to lower return costs and incidences of fraud and abuse.
    “It’s not a coincidence, that one bright day, eight months ago, almost every company started to charge for shipping returns, or started to have more restrictive return [policies],” Forter’s Abrahams said. “The money talks. At the end of the day, if you’re seeing that you’re starting to pay too much for restocking, or validating the items that are being returned, or shipping costs for returns, then you’re going to have to hold those costs to your clients.” Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO: More

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    Workers are sour on the job market — but it may not be warranted

    Employee confidence touched its lowest point since 2016 in January, according to career site Glassdoor.
    That’s likely because of recent layoff announcements, one expert said. They’ve come from prominent companies including Amazon, BlackRock, Citigroup, eBay, Google, Microsoft and Universal Music Group.
    While the job market has cooled from red-hot levels, it’s still robust, economists said.

    Maskot | Digitalvision | Getty Images

    Workers are sour on the job market — but that pessimism may be somewhat misplaced.
    The Glassdoor Employee Confidence Index in January fell to its lowest level since 2016, when the career site began tracking the metric, it said Monday. The index measures how workers feel about their employer’s six-month business outlook.

    The decline suggests job security is a “prominent” worry, said Daniel Zhao, lead economist at Glassdoor. “It’s a signal that employees are concerned heading into 2024,” he said.

    Layoff headlines mask ‘very robust’ job market

    That deterioration is likely due to a wave of layoff announcements in recent weeks, Zhao said.
    So far in 2024, for example, big technology firms including Amazon, eBay, Google and Microsoft have announced job cuts. But it’s not just tech. Others such as BlackRock, Citigroup and Universal Music Group also announced layoffs.
    U.S.-based companies planned about 722,000 job cuts in 2023, almost double those announced in 2022, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, an outplacement and executive coaching firm.

    However, those recent headlines mask strength in the overall job market, economists said.

    From a worker’s perspective, things “don’t get any better,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.
    Despite pockets of layoffs in certain industries such as tech, Zandi said job cuts across the broad U.S. labor market continue to hover near historic lows, where they’ve been since spring 2021.

    New claims for unemployment insurance are in line with their pre-pandemic trend in 2019, which economists describe as a period of labor market strength. The unemployment rate has also been below 4% for two years.
    Indeed, when it comes to the average annual unemployment rate, 2023 was the sixth-best year on record, ranking only behind a few years in the 1950s and 1960s, said Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter.
    “It’s still a very robust and resilient labor market overall,” Pollak said.

    Outlook depends on your reference point

    While the Glassdoor index shows deteriorating confidence, other measures signal a rosier view about the job market and U.S. economy.
    For example, consumer sentiment jumped 13% in January to its highest level since July 2021, according to the University of Michigan. Similarly, a Conference Board poll also found that consumer optimism strengthened in December across all ages and household income levels.
    Housing values and stock prices are at record highs and, in relative terms, “everyone’s got a job,” Zandi said.
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    ZipRecruiter’s Job Seeker Confidence Index also rose in the last two quarters of 2023, though it remains below early 2022.
    Overall worker sentiment likely depends on their reference point, Pollak said.
    For example, if workers are comparing outcomes relative to what was expected to happen in 2023 — a year in which many economists had expected the U.S. to tip into recession — then the recent job market looks like “a miracle,” Pollak said.
    However, workers are more apt to compare their current outlook to that of a year or two ago, a time when the job market was red hot and workers had record leverage to get better jobs and higher pay. Since then, “things have definitely cooled and slowed,” Pollak said.

    The one ‘blemish’ in the U.S. economy

    The Federal Reserve raised borrowing costs aggressively to cool the economy and labor market to ultimately tame persistently high inflation.
    The inflation rate has decreased significantly from its pandemic-era peak. But the inflationary episode has left consumer costs noticeably more expensive, especially for staples such as food and rent, economists said.
    “The only [economic] blemish — and it’s a big blemish — is prices are much higher than they were two to three years ago,” Zandi said.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    High pandemic-era inflation eroded buying power for the average person in consecutive months for more than two years. While wage growth was historically high, workers’ paychecks bought less.
    But that trend has reversed: Wage growth now surpasses the rate of inflation for the average person, meaning workers’ paychecks are growing again relative to the things they buy. If that trend holds, consumer confidence should gradually rebound, Zandi said.Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO: More

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    Starbucks olive oil-infused Oleato drinks to launch across the U.S.

    Starbucks is launching its Oleato drinks in all U.S. stores beginning Tuesday, the company said.
    The Oleato drinks previously debuted in select stores across the country and were the brain child of former CEO Howard Schultz.
    The drinks were initially met with negative reviews.

    Starbucks is launching its beverages called Oleato in all U.S. stores.
    Courtesy: Starbucks

    Starbucks is launching its olive oil-infused drinks in all U.S. stores beginning Tuesday, the company said.
    The beverages, named Oleato, debuted in Italy in February 2023 after former CEO Howard Schultz visited the country and noticed locals drinking olive oil daily. The line of olive oil-infused coffee drinks launched the next month in select U.S. Starbucks stores and met negative early reviews, with The New Yorker saying the drink “tasted like a large spoonful of olive oil in coffee.”

    Oleato means “with oil” in Italian, according to Starbucks. The line includes a latte and an iced espresso drink.
    It also features the Oleato Golden Foam, which the company said is a vanilla sweet cream infused with Partanna extra virgin olive oil that can be added to any Starbucks drink. Four recommended customizations for the foam will also be available in the app, Starbucks added.
    The launch comes on the same day Starbucks will report fourth-quarter earnings.
    The company is trying to sustain sales growth in its North America unit. Its shares have fallen more than 3% so far this year.Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO: More

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    Having too many options can paralyze investors. Here’s how you can overcome ‘choice overload’

    Too much choice can paralyze investors, causing inertia and other negative behaviors.
    Choice overload is a behavioral finance concept that isn’t specific to investing. It can also occur when consumers buy food and apparel, for example.
    Investors can overcome choice paralysis by making their decision as simple as possible. Target-date and balanced funds are good options, experts said.

    Sdi Productions | E+ | Getty Images

    Humans like choice. Indeed, it’s a bedrock principle of autonomy and freedom.
    But when it comes to investing, having too many choices can be bad.

    “Most likely, it will hurt you rather than help you,” said Philip Chao, a certified financial planner and founder of Experiential Wealth, based in Cabin John, Maryland.
    The dominant view in economics is that more options are “unambiguously” good.
    To that point, a “rich” environment of choice lets consumers “curate an experience tailored to their preferences,” wrote Brian Scholl, chief economist of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Office of the Investor Advocate.
    However, in the real world, our experience diverges from this paradigm, he said.
    Humans get overwhelmed by too many options, a behavioral finance concept known as “choice overload.”

    Often, people — especially those new to something that carries high stakes — are fearful of making a bad choice or regretting their decision, said CFP David Blanchett, head of retirement research for PGIM, an investment manager.
    This paradox of choice can have many negative impacts on investors: inertia, or doing nothing; naïve diversification, or spreading money across a little bit of everything; and favoring attention-grabbing investments, wrote Samantha Lamas, senior behavioral researcher at Morningstar.
    “These shortcuts can become disastrous mistakes,” she said.

    How investors encounter choice overload

    Christopher Ames | E+ | Getty Images

    It’s not just investing: The choice paradox can extend to things like ice cream flavors and apparel, for example.  
    Among the early research experiments: buying gourmet jam at an upscale grocery store. According to that 2000 study, by Sheena Iyengar and Mark Lepper, a tasting booth with a large display of exotic jams (24 varieties) received more customer interest than a smaller one with six varieties. But customers who saw the small display were 10 times more likely to buy jam than those who saw the larger one.
    Given these behavioral biases, retailers and others have evolved, making it less likely consumers will experience choice overload “in the wild” today, said Dan Egan, vice president of behavioral finance and investing at Betterment.
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    However, let’s say an investor wants to save money in a taxable brokerage account or individual retirement account. They generally have hundreds or even thousands of options available from which to choose, and several characteristics to compare, such as cost and performance.
    “There’s literally more choice than would ever be useful to you,” Egan said.
    It’s a bit different in the context of 401(k) plans, experts said.

    Do-it-yourselfers may have about one to two dozen investment options, at most, from which to choose, reducing the choice friction.
    Further, most employers automatically enroll workers into a target-date fund, a one-stop shop for retirement savers that’s generally well diversified and appropriately allocated based on the investor’s age. This eliminates much of the decision-making.
    If you don’t give people an easy choice, “it’s really hard for them,” Blanchett said.

    Make it as simple as possible

    Ultimately, long-term investors who are paralyzed by their available choices should make the process as simple as possible when starting out, experts said.
    For most people, that’s likely to be investing in a well-diversified mutual fund like a target-date fund or a 60/40 balanced fund (which is allocated 60% to stocks and 40% to bonds), experts said.
    “Either one of those [funds] is an excellent place to start as opposed to putting all money in cash or not investing,” Blanchett said.
    Even within TDFs and balanced fund categories, there can be dozens of different options. Experts recommend seeking out a provider like Vanguard Group with relatively low costs. (You can do this by comparing the “expense ratios” of various funds.)
    Here’s another approach: If you open a brokerage account at Vanguard, Fidelity or Charles Schwab, for example, use their respective TDFs or balanced portfolios, Blanchett said. In these cases, you’re offloading most of the investment decision-making to professional asset managers, and the large providers generally have high quality, he said.
    “Is it necessary to buy all the ingredients to make a cake, or can you just buy a cake and eat it?” Chao said.
    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO: More