By Jordan DiPietro
January 22, 2010
Figuring out what you believe to be the intrinsic value of a stock is one of the most significant things you can do. If you bought shares of Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) for more than $10 a pop, you better know at what price you'd be willing to sell, or you may find your stock hitting rock bottom.
When investors try to determine a sales price, it seems as though we all too often let our emotions get the best of us. To illustrate this point, consider an experiment documented by behavioral economist and professor Dan Ariely.
The reason is that the lottery winners were victims of ownership bias; that is, they overvalued what they owned, simply because they owned it!
- This helps explain why people may have held on to shares of Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO) or Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO), even when the dot.com bubble was bursting at the seams.
- Or why people were still holding onto financials like Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) in 2007, when the subprime crisis was all but written on the wall.
- In August of last year, I purchased shares of General Electric (NYSE: GE) when it was trading for about $11 and change.
- Because there is constant controversy surrounding a conglomerate like GE, I find myself ignoring criticisms of the company or critiques about GE's capital division -- just because I own the stock.
- I constantly have to remind myself to step back, impartially evaluate the company, and reassess my prospects for the industry.
- The stock eventually fell as low as $6 (though it has since recovered to $16).
Say you were bullish on the solar industry and owned shares of First Solar (Nasdaq: FSLR) and Suntech Power (NYSE: STP), and analysts were coming out with negative industry reports. Instead of listening to the scrutiny and reading the reports, many investors would simply ignore the contrary opinion and convince themselves that their original analysis was correct. Because if in fact the analysts were correct -- and the solar industry was doomed -- then you'd have to sell your shares, and we've already established how we feel about things we already own. We simply don't like to let things go, whether it's a basketball ticket or a share of stock.
Remember, there's no greater way to avoid having your stock hit rock bottom than having received objective analysis and reasonable advice.