
Step 1
Past cost changes identity, not future value
The amount already lost influences emotion, but it does not improve the expected return of the position from today forward. Treat every review as a ne...
Sunk cost fallacy shows up when past losses, time, or ego starts controlling a decision that should be made from today’s forward-looking expected return. Use a fresh-capital question plus a short loser-review checklist (thesis status, new evidence, opportunity cost, and a pre-written exit trigger) to decide hold/add/exit without goalpost shifting. This research brief summarizes the bias, its common disguises, and process rules that keep decisions auditable.

30-second action
Pick the smallest next action now: test your bias pattern, run a scenario, or copy a prompt before making a portfolio move.

Step 1
The amount already lost influences emotion, but it does not improve the expected return of the position from today forward. Treat every review as a ne...

Step 2
Investors often call inaction “patience” even when the real driver is reluctance to admit a mistake. Separate patience (waiting for a thesis catalyst...

Step 3
Ask a fresh-capital question before you hold, add, or average down: “If I had cash and no position, would I initiate this today?” If the answer is no,...
The amount already lost influences emotion, but it does not improve the expected return of the position from today forward. Treat every review as a new decision: would you buy it today at today’s price, with today’s evidence, given the rest of your portfolio?
Investors often call inaction “patience” even when the real driver is reluctance to admit a mistake. Separate patience (waiting for a thesis catalyst you can name) from avoidance (waiting because selling feels like failure). If you cannot write a thesis update, you are not being patient.
Ask a fresh-capital question before you hold, add, or average down: “If I had cash and no position, would I initiate this today?” If the answer is no, your next step is not to debate price levels—it is to define an exit/trim plan or downgrade the position role.
A stuck loser ties up attention, risk budget, and portfolio slots. Compare the position to your best alternative use of capital (cash, index, or another opportunity) using the same hurdle rate and thesis clarity. If the loser cannot win on fresh-capital terms, sunk-cost thinking is likely driving the hold.
Decide in advance what would make you exit or reduce: a fundamental break (unit economics, balance-sheet risk, competitive loss), a governance red flag, or a time-based thesis expiry. Triggers keep you from moving goalposts when price action creates pressure and “just one more quarter” becomes a habit.

Listen for “I can’t sell now” thinking. If your main reason for holding is to avoid locking in a loss (instead of a forward-looking thesis you can still defend), sunk-cost bias is likely involved. A quick test: write the best fresh-case for buying today in one paragraph—if you cannot, you are anchoring to the past.
No. Averaging down can be rational when new evidence strengthens the thesis and the risk profile is still acceptable. It becomes sunk-cost behavior when price decline alone drives the decision, position size grows beyond your risk budget, or you cannot name what would invalidate the thesis after you add.
Add one mandatory question to every loser review: “Would I buy this today with fresh capital?” Pair it with a short checklist (thesis intact, key evidence updated, opportunity cost compared, exit trigger written, next review date set). The checklist turns a painful decision into a repeatable process.
When the forward-looking case is still strong and specific: the thesis is intact, the downside is survivable, and you have defined what evidence you need next. “I’m down a lot” is not a forward-looking reason. “The thesis is intact and I will exit if X breaks” is.
Using it as a post-hoc justification. The fresh-capital framing only works when you pair it with a written trigger and a review cadence. Otherwise you can keep answering “yes” emotionally while quietly moving the goalposts and turning a process tool into a story.
Review one losing position today as if you were deciding with fresh capital and no ownership history.