Enter Values
Anchoring Bias Formula
Anchoring Analysis
Anchoring Visualization
$100
$90
$75
The gap between your anchored estimate and fair value represents the anchoring bias effect.
Sensitivity Analysis
How results change across different adjustment factors:
| Adjustment | Anchored Est. | Gap | Gap % |
|---|
Formula Breakdown
Understanding Anchoring Bias
What is Anchoring Bias?
Anchoring bias is the tendency to rely too heavily on the first piece of information encountered (the "anchor") when making judgments and decisions. In investing, this manifests when investors fixate on a reference number - like a purchase price, 52-week high, or analyst target - and adjust insufficiently from that starting point when estimating fair value.
Most people adjust only 20-50% of the way to their unanchored estimate
Research Background
Anchoring was documented by Tversky and Kahneman in their 1974 paper "Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases." In their famous experiment, participants who saw a wheel stop on a higher number gave higher estimates for unrelated questions - demonstrating that even obviously irrelevant anchors influence judgment.
Common Anchors in Investing
- Purchase price: Creates the disposition effect - holding losers and selling winners based on arbitrary entry point
- 52-week high/low: Creates false sense of "cheapness" or "expensiveness" relative to historical range
- Analyst targets: Published price targets become anchors that bias your own analysis
- Round numbers: Psychological significance of levels like $50, $100, $1000
Debiasing Strategies
- Start valuations from scratch without looking at current price
- Generate multiple independent estimates before combining
- Ask yourself: "Would I buy this stock today at this price?" to strip out purchase-price anchoring
- Use structured decision frameworks that force consideration of alternatives
- Explicitly note your anchor before making decisions - awareness helps
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. It demonstrates the anchoring bias concept using a simplified model. The "Unanchored Fair Value" you enter is your own estimate - this calculator does not determine fair value. For actual investment decisions, conduct thorough fundamental analysis using appropriate valuation methods. This tool should not be used as the basis for trading decisions.
Related Calculators
Course by Ryan O'Connell, CFA, FRM
Portfolio Analytics & Risk Management
Master portfolio management and risk analysis. Covers behavioral finance, risk metrics, asset allocation, and modern portfolio theory with hands-on Python applications.
- Behavioral finance biases and debiasing strategies
- VaR, CVaR, and advanced risk metrics
- Mean-variance optimization and asset allocation
- Hands-on portfolio analysis with Python