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What Is Herd Mentality?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 10, 20262 min read
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Herd mentality is the tendency to follow and mimic the financial decisions of a larger group, often without independent analysis. In markets, herd behavior amplifies both bull market euphoria and bear market panics — producing bubbles and crashes that fundamentals alone don't justify.

The Meme Stock Example

GameStop rose 1,700% in early 2021 — not because the company's fundamentals improved (they didn't), but because a herd of retail investors coordinated on social media to buy the stock. Each purchase encouraged others; the herd grew; prices detached entirely from business value.

At its peak, GameStop's market cap exceeded $30 billion despite the company losing money. Was GameStop worth $30 billion? No. The valuation was pure herd behavior: "others are buying, so I'll buy too."

The same herd behavior caused the Dot-Com bubble (1995-2000) where companies with no revenue traded at billion-dollar valuations purely because "the internet is the future."

How Herds Form

Herd behavior doesn't require coordination or conspiracy. It emerges naturally: when you see others buying, you infer there's valuable information you're missing. "If smart people are buying, maybe I should too." Each person assumes others know something. The herd grows; prices rise; the assumption strengthens.

This works until it doesn't. When the first major seller exits, herd mentality reverses. "If smart people are selling, maybe I should too." The herd stampedes for the exits; prices crash.

Market Crashes and Herds

The 1987 stock market crash was 100% herd behavior — prices fell 22% in a single day on no new information, just panic selling that triggered automated selling that triggered more panic. The 2008 financial crisis similarly combined fundamental problems with massive herd behavior amplifying the decline.

Fighting Herd Pressure

Contrarian investing requires resisting herd pressure. When everyone is buying (herd euphoria), the contrarian sells. When everyone is selling (herd panic), the contrarian buys. This is psychologically difficult because herds feel safe — "everyone else is doing it."

But history shows that herd-driven valuations are unreliable. The best stock market returns go to those who buy when herds are panicked and fleeing, not when herds are euphoric and rushing in.

◆ Sources

  1. Herd Mentality — Investopedia
  2. Dot-Com Bubble
  3. Black Monday 1987
  4. Investment Fundamentals — SEC
  5. Investor Protection — FINRA
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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