The Wisdom Bite: "...which every movement takes him further and further from the right direction, and that to admit the deviation to himself is the same as admitting disaster."
The Deeper Connection: One of the most destructive forces in investing is the refusal to admit a mistake. We buy a stock, the thesis breaks down, and the price plummets. Instead of objectively re-evaluating the facts, we double down. We average down to "lower our cost basis," trying to convince the market (and ourselves) that we were right all along.
The Nomad Investment Partnership letters defined this psychological trap as denial: "the reinvention of reality in the mind because the truth is too painful to bear". Howard Marks points out that behavioral studies have long proven that people will "stay with clearly wrong decisions rather than change them, throw good money after bad, justify failed predictions rather than admit they were wrong, and resist, distort or actively reject information that disputes their beliefs". We keep moving in the wrong direction because cutting the loss forces us to admit that our initial judgment was flawed.
The Financial Takeaway: The market does not care about your ego. When a thesis is proven wrong, taking the small loss early is a sign of immense discipline. Do not let the fear of "admitting disaster" paralyze you into holding a toxic asset until it goes to zero. As C.S. Lewis noted, when you have taken a wrong turn, going forward doesn't get you any nearer to where you want to be.