The disposition effect is a behavioral bias where investors tend to sell winning investments too early while holding onto losing investments for too long.
This bias directly impacts investment performance. It often leads to:
It is closely tied to emotions like regret and loss aversion.
The disposition effect occurs because:
This results in behavior that is the opposite of disciplined investing.
An investor sells a stock that gained 10% quickly but continues holding another that has dropped 30%, hoping it will recover.
Why do investors hold losing investments?
To avoid realizing a loss.
Is this bias common?
Yes, even among experienced investors.
How can it be avoided?
By using rules-based strategies and focusing on fundamentals.