Anchoring Bias: How It Harms Your Stop-Loss Placement
Stop anchoring to entry prices and round numbers; use ATR-based and market-structure stops to place exits where the thesis actually fails.
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Anchoring is the tendency to over-rely on the first number seen. In trading, that number is usually your entry price, a recent high, or a round figure like $100. Stops placed on anchors rather than structure get hit for no fundamental reason.
The Three Common Anchors
- Entry-price anchor: "I'll risk 5%, so my stop is 5% below entry." The 5% has no relationship to where the setup fails — it is just a percentage you picked.
- Round-number anchor: stops at $50, $100, $150. These levels are visible to every participant and are frequent liquidity magnets.
- Recent-high anchor: "I'll sell if it makes a new high." The prior high is a coincidence of the chart, not a structural level.
Why Anchored Stops Get Hunted
Round numbers and obvious percentage levels cluster orders. Stop clusters are liquidity pools that large orders can sweep. A stock with visible support at $50 and a band of stops at $49.85 will often spike to $49.70 before recovering, taking out the anchored stops and leaving holders out of the move.
The Structural Alternative
A stop belongs where the thesis is disproven, not where the pain threshold is crossed. Identify the structure first, then size so the resulting risk is acceptable.
- ATR-based stops: ATR measures normal volatility. A stop at 1.5x ATR(14) below a swing low sits outside ordinary noise. For ATR $2.00, a $3.00 stop below the swing low accommodates a normal pullback.
- Market-structure stops: place the stop below the most recent higher low (long) or above the most recent lower high (short). If that level breaks, the structure you bought has failed.
- Volatility-adjusted sizing: position size = (account equity × risk %) / stop distance. A $50,000 account risking 1% with a $3 structural stop buys 167 shares; with a $5 stop, 100 shares. Risk stays constant; the stop distance follows the market.
Practical Example
Entry at $48. ATR(14) = $1.80. Prior swing low = $45.50.
- Anchored stop (5% below entry): $45.60 — sits at the swing low, guaranteed to be swept.
- Round-number stop: $45 — below structure, but arbitrary distance.
- Structural stop: $45.25 (below the swing low by 0.5x ATR) — thesis fails only if structure breaks.
- Position size at 1% risk: ($50,000 × 0.01) / ($48 − $45.25) = 182 shares.
Action Points
- Write the structural invalidation level before entry; derive the stop from it.
- Avoid round numbers — if your structural stop lands on $100, move it to $99.85 or $100.15 based on structure.
- Size the position to keep risk constant regardless of stop distance.
- Track "noise stops" as a journal category; if it exceeds 30% of stops, widen to 2x ATR.
The thesis defines the stop; the stop defines the size. Letting an arbitrary number define the stop hands the edge to participants who placed those numbers there on purpose.
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