Anchoring Bias
How Anchoring Bias Works
Your brain uses mental shortcuts (heuristics) to process complex information quickly. Anchoring is one of the most powerful: once a number is planted in your mind, all subsequent estimates get pulled toward that number — even when it’s completely irrelevant to the question at hand.
In behavioral finance, anchoring explains why investors obsess over their cost basis, why analysts are slow to revise price targets, and why markets sometimes take months to fully reprice a stock after a fundamental change. The anchor doesn’t just influence the starting point of your analysis — it warps the entire conclusion.
Common Anchors That Mislead Investors
| Anchor | Why It’s Misleading | What to Use Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Your purchase price | Irrelevant to current value — the market doesn’t know or care what you paid | Current intrinsic value based on fundamentals |
| 52-week high/low | Historical prices reflect old information and different conditions | P/E, EV/EBITDA, and FCF analysis |
| Analyst price target | Often stale, consensus-driven, and slow to update | Build your own fundamental model |
| IPO price | Set by underwriters for deal mechanics, not fair value | Post-IPO fundamentals and peer comparisons |
| Round numbers ($100, $50) | No fundamental significance — purely psychological | Support and resistance levels based on volume |
Anchoring Bias vs. Other Behavioral Biases
| Dimension | Anchoring Bias | Confirmation Bias |
|---|---|---|
| What it affects | Your numerical estimates and valuations | Your information gathering and interpretation |
| Trigger | An initial data point or number | An existing belief or thesis |
| Mechanism | Adjustment from anchor is insufficient | Selective filtering of evidence |
| Example | Thinking a stock is cheap because it fell from $200 to $100 | Only reading bullish reports after buying a stock |
| Fix | Base analysis on current fundamentals, not price history | Actively seek disconfirming evidence |
Anchoring in Valuation: A Practical Example
Say a stock traded at $150 and had a P/E ratio of 30x. Earnings drop 40% due to a structural change in the business. The stock falls to $90. An anchored investor thinks: “$90 is a 40% discount — what a bargain!” But if you run the numbers with the new earnings, a fair P/E of 15x (lower multiple for lower growth) gives you a fair value of $54. The “bargain” is actually 67% overvalued.
This is how anchoring destroys returns. The old price of $150 has zero relevance to the stock’s current value, but your brain treats it as a meaningful reference point anyway.
How to Overcome Anchoring Bias
Start every analysis from scratch. Instead of asking “is this stock cheap compared to where it was?”, ask “what would I pay for this business if I’d never seen it before?” Build fundamental valuations based on current and projected free cash flow, revenue, and margins — not on price charts.
Use multiple valuation methods (P/E, EV/EBITDA, DCF) and compare to sector peers. If all methods point to the same range and it’s significantly different from the current price, trust the analysis — not the anchor.
Key Takeaways
- Anchoring bias makes you fixate on irrelevant reference points like purchase price or 52-week highs
- It distorts valuation analysis by pulling estimates toward the anchor instead of fundamental reality
- The most dangerous anchor is your own cost basis — it has zero relevance to what a stock is actually worth
- Always start analysis from current fundamentals, not price history
- Using multiple valuation methods helps break free from any single anchor
Frequently Asked Questions
What is anchoring bias in finance?
Anchoring bias is the tendency to rely too heavily on an initial piece of information when making financial decisions. Investors commonly anchor to purchase prices, analyst price targets, or historical highs — all of which may be irrelevant to a stock’s current intrinsic value.
What’s a real-world example of anchoring bias?
Buying a stock at $100, watching it fall to $60, and thinking it’s “cheap” because it’s 40% below your purchase price. Whether $60 is cheap depends entirely on current fundamentals — not where you happened to buy it.
How does anchoring bias affect stock valuations?
It causes investors and analysts to adjust their valuations insufficiently from a reference point. If a stock historically traded at 25x P/E, anchored analysts might set their target at 20x even when the business deterioration warrants 12x.
Is anchoring bias related to loss aversion?
They’re related but distinct. Anchoring makes you fixate on a reference price, while loss aversion makes you unwilling to sell below it. Together, they explain why investors stubbornly hold losing positions anchored to their purchase price.
How do professional analysts avoid anchoring bias?
Many use “blind” valuation approaches: building DCF models and peer comparisons before looking at the current stock price. Some firms also rotate coverage to prevent analysts from becoming anchored to their own previous estimates.