Sunk-Cost Fallacy: When to Sell Stocks Even at a Loss

BEHAVIORAL FINANCE · SUNK-COST FALLACY

Sunk-Cost Fallacy — When to Sell Stocks Even at a Loss

“I can’t sell now, I’ve already lost $5,000.” That sentence is the most expensive in retail-investor vocabulary. What you paid is sunk: the money is gone, regardless of what you do next. The only relevant question is: would I buy this today at the current price? Here are six trigger questions, clear mechanics, and three real cases where selling at a loss was the only correct call.

What the sunk-cost fallacy is

Arkes/Blumer 1985 demonstrated the effect: subjects who paid for a theatre ticket attend the show even in bad weather. Subjects with a free ticket stay home much more often. The money already paid does not come back — regardless of action. But the human brain treats it as if a “paid” account had to be settled against a benefit.

Punchline: Sunk costs are by definition irrelevant to future decisions. The money is gone. The only forward-relevant question: what happens to current capital from here?
THE ONLY RELEVANT QUESTION
Sell decision = f(future expectation) cost basis

Sell decision is purely a function of future expectation — orthogonal to cost basis. What you paid cannot move current capital. It can only move your perception — and that is the trap.

Six trigger questions justifying a loss-sale

  1. Would I buy this stock today at the current price? If no → sell. Doesn’t matter whether the loss is 10% or 60%.
  2. Has the thesis changed? New competitors, regulatory issues, management change, debt up. If yes → sell.
  3. Is there a better alternative for the same capital? If another position has 5%+ higher annual return expectation → switch.
  4. Do I have an emotional attachment to the stock? “My stock”, “my favourite sector”, “my first position” → sell, because emotional attachment amplifies the bias.
  5. Would a neutral advisor sell? Imagine you inherit exactly this portfolio. Would you keep it as-is? If no → sell, because in fact you do inherit it (every day, from yourself).
  6. Does the position affect your sleep? If you think about it at night, two possibilities: position size too big or thesis too weak. Either → sell or reduce.

Three real cases for the right sell at a loss

  • Wirecard 2018 (special-audit phase): Investors at €100 cost basis saw the stock halve to €50 in 2018. Selling during the special-audit phase avoided the total loss two years later. “I can’t accept a 50% loss” became “I lost 100%”.
  • Tilray 2019 (cannabis-mania top): Investors at $250 saw the stock fall to $120. Selling in Q1 2019 saved the fall to $1.80 today. The 50% loss looked like “it’ll come back” in 2019, but it was the top of the cannabis bubble.
  • Bayer 2020 (glyphosate phase): Investors at €95 saw the stock fall to €50. Selling in the first glyphosate wave 2020 meant −47%. Holding meant −74% today. Holding cost a second halving.

In all three cases the rational decision was: sell, realise the loss, redeploy capital into better alternatives. The sunk-cost fallacy held many investors back and amplified the damage by 2-50x.

The most expensive variant: “averaging down to break-even”

An especially aggressive sunk-cost form: cost-averaging down on a falling stock. Logic: “Bought at $100, now at $50, average $75 — only needs to rise to $75 for break-even.”

Trap: You buy a stock that has already negatively surprised you. Instead of asking “would I buy fresh today?”, you ask “can I save my old engagement?” — pure sunk-cost. Wirecard, Tilray, Bayer all had investors who averaged down and amplified the damage.

If the thesis is intact, averaging down is rational. If the thesis is shaky, averaging down is loss amplification.

When holding is right

Sunk-cost fallacy doesn’t mean “always sell when red”. Holding is right when:

  • Fundamental business metrics are stable or better than at purchase (cashflows, margins, market share)
  • The price drop is market-driven (sector correction), not company-specific
  • You would buy fresh today — not because cost basis was $100, but because $50 is cheap
  • You have a 5-10 year horizon and can sit through volatility
  • Position size is manageable (max 5-10% of portfolio) — even total loss doesn’t change the life plan

How much does the sunk-cost fallacy cost?

StudyFindingReturn drag
Arkes/Blumer 1985 (original)Sunk-cost subjects make worse forward decisionsVariable by setting
Statman/Caldwell 1987 (stocks)Investors with loss positions hold 2.5x longer than rational1-2% p.a. drag
Coval/Shumway 2005 (traders)Even pros show sunk-cost — measured intraday0.5% per day on affected trades
BMI investor data 202434% of held loss positions wouldn’t be bought today by the same investorStructurally significant

Pros & cons of hard stop-loss systems

PRO HARD STOPS
  • Sunk-cost mechanically eliminated
  • Loss size capped (e.g. −20%)
  • Capital redeployed
  • Tax-loss can be harvested
CON “NEVER SIT IT OUT”
  • Volatile quality stocks (Tesla, NVIDIA) need wide stops
  • Market crashes deliver 30% drawdowns even on good stocks
  • Mechanical stops can knock you out of compounders

Recommendation: re-entry test as universal tool, hard stops only on speculative names, wide stops (20-30%) on core positions.

Common questions

Is sunk-cost the same as loss aversion?

Related, not identical. Loss aversion is the valuation (pain vs joy). Sunk-cost fallacy is the wrongful inclusion of past costs into decision logic. Loss aversion produces sunk-cost behaviour — sunk-cost is the direct logical consequence.

What about “buy & hold strategy”?

Buy & Hold isn’t sunk-cost-driven if it’s a deliberate, pre-defined strategy. Sunk-cost is reactive holding without clear logic — “because I already lost $5,000”. True buy & hold says: “because I believe in 20 years of compounding”.

How often should I run the re-entry test?

Recommendation: monthly for any position > 5% portfolio share, quarterly for smaller. Spot check before any major market event (earnings, macro events).

What if the loss exceeds my tax-loss bucket?

US: $3,000 ordinary-income offset per year, surplus carries forward. Germany: stock losses only offset stock gains; surplus carries forward indefinitely. Don’t worry — the loss isn’t lost, just deferred.

What if the stock came from a family member?

Inheritance is sunk-cost trap plus endowment effect plus emotional attachment. Mandatory question: would I buy today? If no → sell. Often you can honour the deceased by deploying capital into a position that fits your own strategy.

Loss realisation in a crisis — counterproductive?

Selling during a crash isn’t anti-sunk-cost, it’s panic selling. Important: run the re-entry test — if the thesis is intact, hold or add. If the thesis is genuinely broken by the crisis, then sell. Sunk-cost fallacy doesn’t mean “always sell in a crash”.

Risk note: Selling at a loss isn’t universally right — only right when the thesis is gone. Mechanically realising every loss costs money on market noise. This page is general education, not investment advice.

Related Hubs: Investor Glossary | Legendary Quotes

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