I think I would call it either the sunk cost fallacy, or the endowment effect/bias.
The latter because you are equally uncertain about whether its value will go up or go down, and so its value to you ought to be exactly its (current) cash-equivalent, and in fact, less because presumably you are risk-averse like all other humans (and so an equal chance of loss or gain is worse than a guaranteed no-loss/no-gain) - and yet you are still holding the stock.
I think I would call it either the sunk cost fallacy, or the endowment effect/bias.
The latter because you are equally uncertain about whether its value will go up or go down, and so its value to you ought to be exactly its (current) cash-equivalent, and in fact, less because presumably you are risk-averse like all other humans (and so an equal chance of loss or gain is worse than a guaranteed no-loss/no-gain) - and yet you are still holding the stock.