Anchoring Bias
Anchoring bias is the tendency to rely too heavily on the first or most salient number encountered, such as an entry price or a stock's 52-week high, using it as a reference that distorts later judgements even when it has no bearing on future value.
Quick answer: Anchoring bias is the tendency to rely too heavily on the first or most salient number encountered, such as an entry price or a stock's 52-week high, using it as a reference that distorts later judgements even when it has no bearing on future value.
In simple words
Anchoring means letting a random or irrelevant number set your expectations. If a stock once hit Rs 1,000, that figure sticks in your mind and Rs 600 feels cheap, even if the business is worth far less now. Your entry price becomes an anchor too, so you judge the trade by whether it is above or below what you paid, not by what the market is doing. The first number you see quietly drags every later decision toward it, whether or not it makes sense.
Purpose
Anchoring bias matters because the anchors traders use, entry price, round numbers, past highs, are usually irrelevant to future returns, yet they hijack decisions about targets, stops and value, so recognising the anchor is the first step to ignoring it.
Professional explanation
The anchoring heuristic from Tversky and Kahneman
Anchoring was demonstrated by Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman in the 1970s as one of the heuristics people use under uncertainty. In a famous experiment they spun a wheel of fortune rigged to land on 10 or 65, then asked participants to estimate the percentage of African nations in the United Nations. Those shown the higher number gave far higher estimates, even though the wheel was obviously random and irrelevant. The number served as an anchor from which people adjusted insufficiently. The finding is robust: an initial value, however arbitrary, biases subsequent numerical judgements, and people rarely adjust far enough away from it.
Entry price as the most damaging anchor
In trading the most costly anchor is your own entry price. The market does not know or care what you paid, and future prices depend on future information, yet the entry price becomes the reference against which a position is judged as winning or losing. This makes traders reluctant to sell below entry, waiting to get back to even, and quick to sell just above it, banking a small gain. It is closely tied to loss aversion, but the mechanism is the anchor itself: a number with no predictive value is treated as the natural centre of gravity for decisions it should not touch.
Round numbers, past highs and target-setting
Beyond entry price, traders anchor on salient round numbers and historical extremes. A stock that once traded at a 52-week high of Rs 1,000 makes Rs 600 feel like a bargain, regardless of whether fundamentals have deteriorated. Nifty at a round 25,000 becomes a psychological magnet for targets and stops. Analysts anchor price targets to current levels and adjust too little when conditions change. These anchors distort the two most important trade decisions, where to take profit and where to cut, because the levels are chosen for their salience or their relation to an irrelevant reference rather than for what the market structure or risk actually justifies.
The India dimension: 52-week highs and IPO prices
Indian retail behaviour shows anchoring clearly around 52-week highs, IPO issue prices and previous peaks. A stock far below its listing price feels cheap to buyers anchored to the issue price, even when the listing was overvalued, and a stock near its 52-week high feels expensive to sellers anchored to that peak. During bull runs, investors anchor to recent highs and treat any dip as a discount, buying falling knives. In F&O, option premiums seen earlier in the day or week become anchors that make later premiums feel cheap or dear, distorting entry timing on Nifty and Bank Nifty contracts irrespective of changed volatility.
Why adjustment from an anchor is insufficient
The core mechanism of anchoring is not just that an anchor is set but that people adjust away from it too little. Once a reference is in mind, judgement moves toward the correct value but stops short, so the final estimate is biased in the anchor's direction. This is why simply knowing an anchor is arbitrary does not neutralise it; the pull persists even when the number is recognised as meaningless, as the wheel-of-fortune result showed. For traders it means that being aware your entry price is irrelevant is not enough. The reference has to be structurally replaced with a forward-looking one, not merely acknowledged as wrong.
Replacing anchors with forward-looking references
The practical defence against anchoring is to base decisions on references that actually relate to future risk and reward rather than on where a price has been. Set stops and targets from current market structure, volatility and the trade's risk budget, not from your entry price or a past high. Ask what you would pay for the position today with no prior exposure, a question that strips out the entry anchor. Use valuation or a defined plan rather than distance from a 52-week high to judge cheapness. The goal is to make the anchor irrelevant to the decision by deliberately deciding on other grounds.
Anchored decisions vs forward-looking decisions
| Decision | Anchored to the past | Based on the future |
|---|---|---|
| Is it cheap? | Far below its 52-week high | Below a justified valuation today |
| Where to exit a loss | Wait to get back to entry | At a level set by risk and structure |
| Where to take profit | A round number that stands out | Where the plan's reward is realised |
| Should I hold? | I am still down on my entry | Would I buy this position today? |
| Is the option cheap? | Cheaper than earlier today | Fair given current volatility |
Practical example
Illustrative example (Indian market)
A trader buys a stock at Rs 500 and it falls to Rs 440 as the sector weakens. Anchored to the Rs 500 entry, they refuse to sell below it, telling themselves they will exit once it returns to even, and they judge every bounce by its distance from Rs 500 rather than by the deteriorating fundamentals. Meanwhile the same anchor makes them plan to sell at a round Rs 550 target, a level chosen for its neatness, not for any structural reason. Both decisions are governed by a number, the entry price, that has no bearing on where the stock goes next, and the position is managed around the anchor instead of around risk and reward.
An investor buys a newly listed SME stock at its Rs 300 issue price. After it drifts to Rs 180 they hold on, anchored to the issue price as the 'real' value and viewing Rs 180 as a temporary discount, even though the listing itself was richly priced. The issue price, set by the offer and irrelevant to future cash flows, becomes the reference that keeps them in a deteriorating position long after the market has repriced it.
Advantages
- Asking 'would I buy this today?' strips the entry price out of the decision
- Setting stops and targets from structure and risk removes reliance on round numbers
- Judging value by fundamentals rather than distance from a high avoids falling-knife buying
- Recognising the anchor lets you deliberately decide on other, forward-looking grounds
- A written plan fixes exit levels before an anchor can distort them
Limitations
- Knowing an anchor is arbitrary does not remove its pull, so awareness alone fails
- Adjustment from an anchor is habitually insufficient, biasing the final judgement
- New anchors form constantly, from each day's prices to each new headline number
- Entry price is unavoidable information, so the anchor is always present
- Forward-looking references require their own judgement, which can be uncertain
Why it matters in practice
- It distorts the two key exit decisions, where to take profit and where to cut a loss
- It makes falling stocks feel cheap relative to past highs, inviting falling-knife buying
- It keeps traders in losing positions waiting to get back to an irrelevant entry price
Common mistakes
- Believing a stock is cheap only because it is far below its 52-week high
- Waiting to sell a loser until it returns to your entry price
- Choosing a round-number target instead of a level justified by the plan
- Assuming that knowing an anchor is irrelevant is enough to ignore it
- Treating an IPO or issue price as the stock's true value
- Judging an option as cheap because it is lower than earlier in the day, ignoring changed volatility
Professional usage
Professional investors and desks discipline anchoring by forcing decisions onto forward-looking references. Valuation work asks what an asset is worth from expected cash flows and risk, not from its past price, and position reviews ask whether the book would be re-established today at current prices. Stops and targets are derived from volatility and structure and written before entry, so an anchor cannot rewrite them in the moment. Analysts are pushed to justify a target independently of the current price. The recurring discipline is to name the anchor explicitly and then decide on grounds that do not depend on it.
Key takeaways
- Anchoring is over-relying on a first or salient number as a reference
- Tversky and Kahneman showed even a random number biases later estimates
- Entry price is the most damaging anchor because the market does not care what you paid
- 52-week highs and IPO prices make falling stocks feel deceptively cheap
- Replace anchors with forward-looking references: would I buy this today?
Frequently asked questions
What is anchoring bias in trading?
Who discovered anchoring bias?
Why is my entry price a bad anchor?
How does anchoring make a stock feel cheap?
Can I remove anchoring just by knowing about it?
How do I reduce anchoring bias?
What is the 'would I buy this today?' test?
How does anchoring affect F&O and options?
Is anchoring the same as loss aversion?
Why do round numbers attract stops and targets?
How does anchoring affect IPO and SME investors?
Do analysts suffer from anchoring?
What is insufficient adjustment?
How does anchoring cause falling-knife buying?
Can anchoring ever help a trader?
How is anchoring different from recency bias?
Why do I refuse to sell below what I paid?
How do professionals avoid anchoring?
Does anchoring affect how I set profit targets?
Is a 52-week high a useful reference?
How does a written trading plan reduce anchoring?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Anchoring Bias.
What is anchoring bias?
Why won't I sell below my buy price?
Why does a fallen stock feel cheap?
How do I beat anchoring?
Is my entry price important for exits?
Does knowing about anchoring stop it?
Sources & references
- Kahneman, Nobel Prize facts
- Tversky & Kahneman (1979), Prospect Theory
- Zerodha Varsity, Trading Psychology
Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.