Cognitive Bias - Making Decision
Cognitive Bias - Making Decisions Sunk Cost Fallacy - You can’t stop once you open Imagine you bought a stock at $100. A few months later, it drops to $70. You feel uncomfortable, but instead of reassessing the business, you decide to buy more. You tell yourself you are being disciplined— “I’m doing dollar-cost averaging.” After all, if you lower your average price, it will be easier to break even when the stock recovers. But let’s slow down and think. Rationally, each new investment decision should be treated independently. The question should be simple: “If I had no position today, would I buy this stock at $70?” In reality, that is not how most of us decide. The original purchase price becomes a psychological anchor. The money already invested feels like something that must be “rescued,” and buying more feels like action, progress, and commitment. Under the name of a rational strategy, we are often just digging deeper—letting sunk costs from the past quietly ...