What Is Averaging Down (Nanpin)? How It Works and Its Risks
Averaging down — nanpin in Japanese — is the practice of buying more of an asset after its price has fallen, in order to lower the average purchase price of the overall position. The idea is that if the price later recovers, the position breaks even sooner than it would have from the original, higher entry. It is a widely known tactic, but it is also one of the riskiest, and this article explains both the mechanics and the serious dangers. It is educational and is not a recommendation to average down.
How averaging down works
Suppose you buy an asset and its price then falls. Averaging down means buying an additional amount at the lower price, which pulls your average cost down.
- You buy 1 unit at 100. Your average cost is 100.
- The price falls to 80, and you buy 1 more unit. Now you hold 2 units at an average cost of 90.
- The price now only needs to recover to 90, rather than 100, for the overall position to break even.
On the surface this looks appealing: the break-even point is closer. But that lower average comes at a cost — you now have a larger position exposed to the same falling market.
Why averaging down is dangerous
The central danger is simple: averaging down adds money to a losing position while the price is still going against you. If the decline continues, you now lose more, faster, because your position is bigger.
- It can turn a small loss into a large one. Each additional purchase increases exposure precisely when the trade is not working.
- It is especially hazardous with leverage. In leveraged futures or perpetual trading, adding to a losing position increases the risk of your margin being exhausted and the position being forcibly closed — see liquidation on liquidation and margin on margin. A downtrend that continues can wipe out a leveraged position entirely.
- It assumes recovery. Averaging down only works if the price eventually rises. If the asset keeps falling — or never recovers — you have simply committed more capital to a losing bet.
Averaging down is a form of contrarian trading, the broader style discussed in trend-following vs contrarian trading, and it inherits that style's core danger: fighting a trend that may keep going.
A worked example — including the downside
Return to the example above: 2 units at an average of 90 after the price fell to 80.
- If the price recovers to 90, the position breaks even — the tactic worked.
- If the price falls further to 60, the loss is now on 2 units instead of 1 — the tactic magnified the damage. With leverage, a move like this could trigger liquidation before any recovery is possible.
The asymmetry is the whole point: averaging down offers a modestly closer break-even in exchange for a much larger loss if you are wrong about the recovery.
Related concepts
- Liquidation: what can happen to a leveraged losing position — liquidation.
- Margin: the collateral that averaging down puts at greater risk — margin.
- Trend-following vs contrarian: the broader style averaging down belongs to — trend-following vs contrarian trading.
Summary
Averaging down (nanpin) means buying more of a falling asset to lower your average cost. It brings the break-even point closer, but it does so by enlarging a losing position, which can turn a small loss into a large one — and with leverage it raises the risk of liquidation. Understanding it means understanding its danger, not treating a lower average as a safety net.
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, financial, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency and derivatives trading involve significant risk. Always do your own research.
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