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🎯 Anchoring Bias – Why Traders Get Stuck to One Price Level
Introduction: “I’ll Sell Only at My Buying Price” – The Most Dangerous Sentence in Trading
Have you ever said this?
“I bought at ₹500. I’ll sell only when it comes back to ₹500.”
If yes, you have experienced Anchoring Bias.
Anchoring bias is one of the most silent and destructive psychological traps in trading.
It makes traders fix their mind to one number — usually their entry price — and take decisions based on that number instead of market reality.
In this article, you’ll learn:
- What anchoring bias is
- How it traps traders
- Real market examples
- Why it destroys portfolios
- How to break free from it
Let’s go deep.
Also read: Overconfidence Trap in Trading – Why Early Wins Create Huge Losses
What is Anchoring Bias in Trading?
Anchoring Bias means relying too much on the first piece of information you see — especially price — and using it as a reference point for all future decisions.
In stock markets, the “anchor” is usually:
- Your buying price
- Previous high
- IPO price
- Old support level
Once your mind gets attached to that number, you stop thinking logically.
Example:
You bought at ₹100.
Stock falls to ₹60.
Instead of thinking:
👉 “Is this still a good stock?”
You think:
👉 “Let it come back to ₹100 first.”
That’s anchoring.
How Anchoring Bias Forms in Traders
Anchoring happens because humans want mental comfort.
When you buy a stock, your brain treats that price as “fair value.”
So:
- Above your price → Feels expensive
- Below your price → Feels cheap
Even if fundamentals change, your brain refuses to update.
This is why traders stay stuck in bad positions for years.
Real-Life Examples of Anchoring Bias
🏦 Example 1: Yes Bank @ ₹300+
Many investors bought Yes Bank around ₹250–₹350.
When it fell:
₹300 → ₹200 → ₹100 → ₹50 → ₹20
People kept saying:
“It will go back to ₹300.”
That ₹300 became the anchor.
Reality didn’t care.
Most lost 80–90% capital.
🚆 Example 2: IRCTC Old High
IRCTC once touched around ₹6000 (pre-split).
After correction, many investors said:
“I’ll sell when it comes back to old high.”
Years passed.
Money got stuck.
Anchor = Old peak price.
📱 Example 3: Paytm IPO @ ₹2150
After listing crash:
₹2150 → ₹1500 → ₹1000 → ₹600
Many investors refused to sell because:
“I’ll wait till ₹2150.”
Anchor = IPO price.
Capital = blocked.
Opportunity = missed.
Common Anchors in Trading
Here are the most dangerous anchors:
1️⃣ Buying Price
“I’ll exit at cost.”
2️⃣ Previous High
“It was ₹1000 once, it will go again.”
3️⃣ Target Given by Someone
“Analyst said ₹800 target.”
4️⃣ IPO Price
“Company is good, IPO price was high.”
5️⃣ Support Level
“It won’t break this level.”
All these are mental traps.
Signs You Are Trapped in Anchoring Bias
Be honest with yourself:
- Do you wait for “break-even” before selling?
- Do you refuse to sell at loss even when trend is bad?
- Do you keep checking old high on charts?
- Do you say “it was once ₹___”?
- Do you avoid reviewing losing stocks?
If yes → Anchoring is controlling you.
How Anchoring Bias Destroys Traders
❌ 1. Keeps You in Losing Trades
You hold bad stocks for years.
❌ 2. Blocks Better Opportunities
Money stuck in losers = no capital for winners.
❌ 3. Increases Emotional Stress
Daily tension: “When will it recover?”
❌ 4. Creates False Hope
You depend on price, not fundamentals.
❌ 5. Delays Learning
You don’t accept mistakes.
Psychology Behind Anchoring
Anchoring is linked to:
🔹 Loss Aversion
You don’t want to accept loss.
🔹 Ego
You don’t want to admit you were wrong.
🔹 Regret Avoidance
Selling below buy price feels painful.
So brain says:
“Wait. Don’t decide now.”
And that delay becomes expensive.
Institutional vs Retail Mindset
Retail Trader:
- Thinks: “My price, my target, my hope.”
Professional:
- Thinks: “Trend, data, probability.”
Institutions don’t care where they bought.
They ask:
“Is this still worth holding TODAY?”
That’s it.
How to Break Anchoring Bias (Step-by-Step)
✅ 1. Ask This Powerful Question
“If I didn’t own this stock, would I buy it today?”
If answer = NO → exit.
✅ 2. Stop Watching Your Buy Price
Hide it in your trading app.
Focus on:
- Trend
- Results
- Volume
- Valuation
Not entry.
✅ 3. Use Technical Exit Rules
Example:
- Below 50 DMA → exit
- Below support → exit
- Trend break → exit
Let rules decide, not emotions.
✅ 4. Re-evaluate Every 3 Months
Ask:
- Is business improving?
- Is sector strong?
- Are results growing?
If not → don’t wait for price.
✅ 5. Accept “Wrong = Normal”
Every trader is wrong sometimes.
Strong traders accept early.
Weak traders hold forever.
Example: Two Investors, Same Stock
Stock bought at ₹200 → falls to ₹120
| Type | Action | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Anchored Trader | Waits for ₹200 | Stuck |
| Smart Trader | Exits at ₹170 | Reinvests, grows |
Difference = mindset.
Bonus Tip: “Price is History, Value is Present”
Market doesn’t care about your past.
Only today matters.
Always remember:
Yesterday’s price ≠ Today’s value
Conclusion
Anchoring bias is one of the biggest reasons why traders stay stuck in bad investments.
It makes you loyal to numbers instead of logic.
If you want to grow in markets:
- Be flexible
- Be honest
- Be adaptive
Detach from price.
Attach to process.
That’s professional thinking.
👉 Next in this Psychology Series:
Recency Bias – Why Recent Events Fool Traders 🔗
