Why the hardest part of investing isn’t the market. It’s the person making the decisions.
Photo by Maxim Hopman on Unsplash
There is a specific moment every trader knows and almost no one talks about.
The stock is down. Not catastrophically — just enough. The reason you bought it hasn’t really changed, but the number on the screen has, and now you’re doing something you didn’t plan to do: you’re negotiating. I’ll sell when it gets back to what I paid. You’re not analyzing anymore. You’re waiting to be made whole, as if the market owes you the price you happened to buy at.
I have sat in that exact moment more times than I’d like to admit. And the uncomfortable truth I eventually had to accept is that the moment isn’t about the stock at all. It’s about me.
The pattern has a name
What I thought was a personal weakness turns out to be one of the most documented behaviors in all of finance. It’s called the disposition effect — the tendency to sell winners too early and hold losers too long.
It isn’t a hunch. Using account data from a large brokerage, researchers found that individual investors are roughly 50 percent more likely to sell a winning position than a losing one, relative to their chances to do so. We lock in gains because they feel good, and we cling to losses because closing them means admitting we were wrong.
Underneath that sits something older and deeper. Kahneman and Tversky called it loss aversion: the pain of losing is psychologically far heavier than the pleasure of an equal gain. A 10,000 loss doesn’t feel like the mirror image of a 10,000 win. It feels worse — so much worse that we’ll take bigger risks just to avoid realizing it. That’s why the losing stock is the one you can’t close. Selling it converts a paper loss, which still feels survivable, into a real one, which feels like a verdict.
Photo by Nicholas Cappello on Unsplash
The expensive part
Here’s the line that rearranged how I think about all of this.
In a landmark study of more than 66,000 households, the investors who traded the most earned an annual return of 11.4 percent, while the market returned 17.9 percent. Same market. Same years. The only variable was activity. The more they traded, the more they fell behind.
The cause the researchers settled on wasn’t bad luck or bad information. It was overconfidence — the quiet, constant belief that this time I’ve read it right, that my conviction is insight rather than noise. Overconfident traders trade more. Trading more costs more and decides worse. The market doesn’t punish stupidity. It punishes certainty.
And it doesn’t spare any of us by geography. Studies of Indian retail investors find the same fingerprints — loss aversion and mental accounting shaping decisions, emotions riding visibly on the P&L. In one survey, traders strongly agreed that losses significantly hit their mood and confidence, and that their sense of self was tied to whether a trade was green or red. The screen stops being a market and becomes a mirror.
What actually changed for me
I didn’t fix this by getting smarter about markets. You can’t out-analyze your own nervous system. What helped was smaller and more boring.
I started writing the exit before the entry — the price I’d sell at if I was wrong — when I was still calm, because the version of me holding a loss cannot be trusted to decide. I started treating the urge to “wait until it gets back to even” as a siren, not a strategy; the market has never once cared what I paid. And I started noticing that the trades I felt most certain about were, suspiciously often, the ones that hurt the most.
The hardest skill in investing isn’t spotting the opportunity. It’s surviving the part where your own brain quietly works against you — and learning to act anyway.
The trade you can’t close is rarely the problem. It’s usually just the place where you finally see yourself clearly.
If you’ve ever held a losing position longer than you should have, you already know the feeling I’m describing. I’d love to hear how you learned to let go — or whether you still struggle with it. The comments are open.
Nothing here is financial advice. It’s just one person’s attempt to understand why smart people make the same expensive mistakes — myself very much included.
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