Anchoring Bias in Stock Valuation: How Entry Prices Distort Your Judgment

BEHAVIORAL FINANCE · ANCHORING BIAS

Anchoring Bias in Stock Valuation — How Your Entry Price Distorts Judgment

You bought Apple at $180. Today it trades at $220. Your brain says: “expensive”. You bought Bayer at $95. Today it trades at $25. Your brain says: “it has to come back”. Both judgments are biased — they measure today’s price against a random anchor (your purchase price) instead of intrinsic value. Here are the mechanics, five common traps and a checklist that switches the anchor off.

What anchoring is

Tversky/Kahneman 1974 showed: people pull numerical estimates unconsciously toward a random reference. In the classic experiment they spun a wheel of fortune with numbers 1-100 and then asked for the share of African UN member states. Those who saw a higher wheel number estimated significantly higher — even though the number had nothing to do with the question.

In stocks your most common anchor is the purchase price. Other popular anchors: the 52-week high, a psychological round price ($100, $1,000), a pre-crisis price level (e.g. “the COVID high”) or the all-time high.

Test: Ask one investor whether $220 for Apple is “expensive”. Ask another who does not own Apple. The two answers diverge significantly — even though the underlying fair-value math should be identical.
THE ANCHOR TRAP
Perceived value Fair value + Anchor distortion

The anchor pulls your judgment toward itself — even when you know it is irrelevant. Studies show distortions of 30-60% of anchor distance. In stocks: with a $100 cost basis and $70 current price, subjects estimate fair value about $10-18 higher than uninvolved observers do.

Five anchor traps that hit every investor

  1. The cost-basis anchor: “I sell once I’m back at break-even.” Cost basis is tax information — not valuation information. The market does not know what you paid and does not behave accordingly.
  2. The 52-week-high anchor: “It’s 30% off the high, so it’s cheap.” Depending on the cycle, the old high is irrelevant. Tech 2021 was an all-time high for many names — and four years on, still not reclaimed.
  3. The round-number anchor: $100, $500, $1,000 act like thresholds. But Berkshire B at $460 and at $540 was at the same valuation point — splits move the anchor, not the value.
  4. The pre-crash anchor: “Before COVID it was 30% higher.” The March 2020 price has no link to today — earnings differ, rates differ, the business model differs. The COVID-era price is one data point, not a benchmark.
  5. The analyst-target anchor: “Goldman sees $250.” Sell-side targets are continually revised toward consensus and on average too high. Anyone using the target as an anchor systematically holds too long.

How much does the anchor cost you?

Study / sourceFindingReturn drag
Genesove/Mayer 2001 (housing)Sellers anchored on cost basis realise lower prices and hold 9 months longer3–5% on sale price
Mussweiler/Strack 2000Even pros (lawyers, traders) show anchoring — effect ~70% of laypeople1–2% p.a. on trading returns
Jegadeesh 1990 (mean reversion)Pure mean-reversion buys (just because 30% off the high) underperform market1–4% p.a. negative
BMI investor data 202476% of sell triggers are anchor-related (cost, high, round level), not thesis-relatedStructural, hard to single-quantify

The anti-anchor test in 5 questions

  • Q1: Would I buy this stock today? Neutralises the cost-basis anchor. If no → sell, regardless of where you bought.
  • Q2: Which fundamental metrics support the current price? P/E, EBITDA margin, cashflow, growth. Fair value is derived here — not from the chart.
  • Q3: What are three comparable alternatives? If others offer a better risk-reward profile, anchor binding is irrelevant — you switch.
  • Q4: What new information since purchase has changed the thesis? New earnings, new competitors, new regulation. If none → re-check anchor, not thesis. If yes → re-check thesis, drop anchor.
  • Q5: If a friend gifted me this stock, would I keep it? Neutralises both anchor and endowment effect.

Example: BMW before and after the anchor reset

Cost basis€98
Current price (May 2026)€82
Anchor perception“−16%, has to come back”
P/E 2026e5.8
Dividend yield7.2%
Fair-value range (DCF)€95–110

In anchor mode BMW feels “underwater”. In fair-value mode BMW is undervalued. Both can be true — but only the second is an investment decision.

Special case: round-number anchors at the threshold

Stocks around $100, $500 or $1,000 frequently see clear technical resistance — not because the round number means anything fundamental, but because many participants stack stops and take-profits there. Knowing the anchor lets you turn it into your own execution edge: limit buys a few cents below the round number fill more reliably than limits exactly at it (the crowded-order effect).

Trick: Instead of a $100.00 limit → use $99.80. You get filled more consistently because other investors target $100.00 or $99.90 exactly. Micro-optimisation, but it adds up across many trades.

Pros & cons: using the anchor on purpose

PRO USING ANCHORS
  • Other participants have anchors — you can anticipate their reactions
  • Round-number levels give technical triggers
  • 52-week lows often signal forced-selling phases
PRO IGNORING ANCHORS
  • Your own cost basis is always to be ignored — irrelevant to fair value
  • Pre-crash highs are mostly obsolete because fundamentals shifted
  • Sell-side targets are systematically too high and constantly moving

Rule of thumb: ignore your own anchors (cost basis, dream-entry price) and use external anchors (round-number triggers, 52-week range) only as technical signals. Not the other way round.

Common questions

Is “buy the dip” anchoring?

Partly yes. Buying just because a stock is 20% off its 52-week high is anchor-driven. Buying because valuation relative to current earnings is attractive is fundamentals-driven. The first loses money in falling knives, the second is repeatable.

How does a stock split change the anchor?

Strongly, even though it changes nothing fundamentally. Berkshire B at $470 feels “normal”, Berkshire A at $700,000 feels “unreachable” — same substance, different anchor. NVIDIA’s 10-for-1 split in 2024 made the round-number effect at $100 and $200 visible. Splits move anchors, not value.

Does DCF help against anchoring?

Yes, when inputs are current. Discounted-cash-flow forces you to work with cashflows, growth rates and discount rates — none of them anchors. Weakness: DCF is highly sensitive to assumptions, easily gamed. More robust: P/E vs peer median, EV/EBITDA spread, dividend yield vs bonds.

What about Bitcoin and round prices?

Crypto is heavily round-number driven. $10,000, $50,000, $100,000 each carry strong psychological weight — and correspondingly stacked stop-loss and take-profit orders. Trading limits a few percent below the round number optimises fill probability noticeably.

Does indexing help against anchoring?

Indirectly yes. With an ETF there is no per-stock cost-basis anchor — you buy market weights. But ETF investors still anchor on index levels (S&P 5,000 as a threshold, DAX 18,000). With broadly diversified savings plans the effect almost disappears — with active ETF rotation it returns.

Anchoring and tax optimisation?

Here the anchor genuinely helps — as cost logic, not as a behavioural bias. For tax-loss harvesting your cost basis IS the relevant number. But it stays a tax input, not a valuation input. Always separate: valuation decision (ignore anchor) vs tax optimisation (use anchor).

Risk note: Switching off the anchor does not mean mechanically forgetting every cost basis. It means using it only where it carries information (tax) and ignoring it where it distorts (investment judgment). This page is general education, not investment advice.

Related Hubs: Investor Glossary | Legendary Quotes

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