So is riding a stock all the way down to zero.Buy low.
Sell high.
Selling at a low price is stupid.
So is riding a stock all the way down to zero.Buy low.
Sell high.
Selling at a low price is stupid.
This. If a stock drops 8% or more, get out. Immediately and move on. Statistically speaking you are better off. Either it's never coming back or it will take such a long time you are better off elsewhere.So is riding a stock all the way down to zero.
This. If a stock drops 8% or more, get out. Immediately and move on. Statistically speaking you are better off. Either it's never coming back or it will take such a long time you are better off elsewhere.
Learn to sell.
Hold your winners, dump your losers.
THREE very solid points/rules of real investing, vs the trite "buy low, sell high"
This. If a stock drops 8% or more, get out. Immediately and move on. Statistically speaking you are better off. Either it's never coming back or it will take such a long time you are better off elsewhere.
Learn to sell.
Hold your winners, dump your losers.
THREE very solid points/rules of real investing, vs the trite "buy low, sell high"
Really?8% doesn’t seem that much unless you’re talking dividend blue chip stuff. Half of the nasdaq moves that much on a monthly basis![]()
Really?
Two questions for you, then.
What number do you use?
What‘s the value of your portfolio?
Following the 4% rule ensures that you don’t bet the farm on any one stock.
For those who don’t know, the 4% rule is simple. No more than 4% of your portfolio should be in any single stock.
Even if you invest in indexes applying the 4% rule to any single stock you might purchase outside of those still gives you peace of mind.
Following the 4% rule ensures that you don’t bet the farm on any one stock.
For those who don’t know, the 4% rule is simple. No more than 4% of your portfolio should be in any single stock.
Even if you invest in indexes applying the 4% rule to any single stock you might purchase outside of those still gives you peace of mind.
I just play the long game.Nearly every time i have trimmed a stock at a loss it has gone up in my face within months. I try to never sell anything at a loss unless its a tax harvest play. In a week or so i can buy one of them back for a little less and i will have cut the 2021 tax bill a little.
You just never know what the market will do and what any given stock will do.
The thing about this rule, it applies to stocks bought according to proper charts, using correct techniques in a bull market. Not randomly bought or stocks bought "because they were low"8% doesn’t seem that much unless you’re talking dividend blue chip stuff. Half of the nasdaq moves that much on a monthly basis![]()
Visa, for example. Down pretty big from ATH someone could have bought “the dip” at 210 in early November, been down 8% within four weeks (actually more like 10%) but now another four to five weeks later it’s at 221 and likely on its way a fair bit higher. Plus if you’re averaging down your 210 average could be like 205 or whatever before the reversal.
Most likely the buy was not well timed. Never selling at a loss is not a prescription for success. I mean basically this tells me some folks either have forgotten or don't know what a bear market is.Nearly every time i have trimmed a stock at a loss it has gone up in my face within months. I try to never sell anything at a loss unless its a tax harvest play. In a week or so i can buy one of them back for a little less and i will have cut the 2021 tax bill a little.
You just never know what the market will do and what any given stock will do.
I think the Fed is gonna burst this bubble trying to stop inflation