Loss Aversion

The psychological tendency to feel losses roughly twice as painfully as equivalent gains feel pleasurable.

Behavioral Finance

Definition

Discovered by Kahneman and Tversky (Nobel Prize 2002), loss aversion is the most fundamental behavioral bias in finance. A $1,000 loss causes roughly twice the emotional impact of a $1,000 gain. This asymmetry leads to suboptimal behaviors: holding losing positions too long (hoping to break even), selling winners too early (locking in gains), and excessive risk aversion that reduces long-term returns.

lightbulb Example

An investor holds a stock down 30%, refusing to sell despite deteriorating fundamentals, because realizing the loss is psychologically painful. Meanwhile, they sell a stock up 20% to "lock in gains," missing further appreciation. Both decisions are driven by loss aversion.

verified_user Key Points

  • Losses feel ~2x more painful than equivalent gains feel good
  • Leads to holding losers and selling winners prematurely
  • Foundation of prospect theory
  • Most fundamental behavioral bias in investing

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