Diversifying is important. For years I've been kicking myself for buying real estate instead of just the stock market. Well, right now my real estate is the superstar.
dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:
Huh?
I have a feeling that anyone who owns shares of TGT today is NOT in agreement with you and thinking that this is hardly some sort of collapse in TGT stock.
Target hasnt traded this low since October of 2020.
That's a whole lot of investors that are underwater.
You have the mindset of a trader, not an investor.
I have a feeling that you and Cbbass1 werent around for Black Monday of 1987
That's the last time that Target shares plunged as much as they did today.
I remember Black Monday, although I was not invested.
The markets recovered very quickly.
Markets clearly arent recovering quickly.
They arent recovering at all.
Just ask Cathie Wood.
This isnt 1987.
You dont fight the Fed.
It depends on your timeline.
If you have conviction in the companies you are invested in then consider this a sale.
It took 7 years to recover after the 2000 Internet bubble popped.
My strategy is as follows:
1. Buy what I know.
This is advice from Warren Buffet, but it is good advice. If I don't know about something I might research it such that I might eventually be educated about it but I don't buy it if I don't understand the business.
2. Know what I own.
I don't buy an investment because it performed well in the past or because some pundit talked it up. In general I am not trying to trade complex derivatives or invest in instruments that don't interest me even if they can be lucrative. I know my limitations.
3. Understand my tolerance for risk.
I never make trades based on fear or fear-of-missing-out. Fearful people sell perfectly good investments just because they had a bad day/week/month/year. People afraid of missing out often buy only at the tops. I am comfortable buying and holding and buying more and holding some more. I know not everyone is like that, but it fits my risk tolerance. I stopped constantly chasing returns a long time ago. I only place bets at the casino when it is for entertainment purposes only.
4. Diversify
The best returns come from picking a handful of winners and riding them for years, but very few people can consistently pick winners. I am not one of them. During the slumps I don't lose any sleep because I understand my tolerance for risk and have allocated my investments appropriately.
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
But then your RE is part of your diversification.dajo9 said:
Diversifying is important. For years I've been kicking myself for buying real estate instead of just the stock market. Well, right now my real estate is the superstar.
I'm afraid that you're so in love with your "Labor vs Capital" narrative that you constantly promote here in just about every thread that you post, that it misses key important facts in service of your ideology - - - such as how the FED will be creating the Recession that you speak of, and yet they aren't owned by the GOP. In fact, they literally arent owned by anyone.cbbass1 said:Sure.DiabloWags said:cbbass1 said:
The politics isn't the only reason for crashing the economy.
Please explain the basis for your claim that politics is behind crashing the economy.
Be specific.
Example: Oil companies & the Saudis have a political preference. Though the oil companies invest heavily in the Dems in order to prevent any action on Climate Change, it's clear that the oil companies would prefer to have Republicans in the majority in both House & Senate. The Saudis clearly prefer Trump & Jared over Biden, because they're easier to purchase, less likely to have issues with Mohammed bin Bonesaw, and less likely to interfere with arms sales for their war against Yemen.
On top of that, with the GOP in the majority, Capital will finally be in a position to "run the table", ignore regulations, especially on Labor and the environment, ignore climate change, and rig elections in their favor nationwide.
So the GOP and Capital have a strong financial interest in drowning small-d democracy in the bathtub. This is accomplished by crashing the economy, and then blaming it on the Dems.
It's not just the oil companies. Health insurers and pharmaceuticals also prefer to have GOP majorities in Congress, and to ignore government regulations and regulators, if the 6-3 SCOTUS doesn't declare all regulations of business unconstitutional first.
When the bubble bursts, those who have cash, and lots of it, are in a position to buy companies, properties, and assets for pennies on the dollar. Those companies that were borrowing & rolling over their debt are in a difficult position, and will either go under or sell out.
The other reason for Capital to crash the economy is to re-exert disproportionate leverage over workers. IF I'm correct on this, expect the Recession / Depression that follows to also lead to massive layoffs and unemployment, with Union members being fired en masse, illegally. The last thing that Capital wants is to have millions of unemployed voters having political power, and voting. So the easy solution for Capital is to have the disgruntled masses voting GOP. There, they can lash out with violent rhetoric against Biden & the Democrats, but the Republicans never have to promise them anything economically!
cbbass1 said:Sure.DiabloWags said:cbbass1 said:
The politics isn't the only reason for crashing the economy.
Please explain the basis for your claim that politics is behind crashing the economy.
Be specific.
Example: Oil companies & the Saudis have a political preference. Though the oil companies invest heavily in the Dems in order to prevent any action on Climate Change, it's clear that the oil companies would prefer to have Republicans in the majority in both House & Senate. The Saudis clearly prefer Trump & Jared over Biden, because they're easier to purchase, less likely to have issues with Mohammed bin Bonesaw, and less likely to interfere with arms sales for their war against Yemen.
On top of that, with the GOP in the majority, Capital will finally be in a position to "run the table", ignore regulations, especially on Labor and the environment, ignore climate change, and rig elections in their favor nationwide.
So the GOP and Capital have a strong financial interest in drowning small-d democracy in the bathtub. This is accomplished by crashing the economy, and then blaming it on the Dems.
It's not just the oil companies. Health insurers and pharmaceuticals also prefer to have GOP majorities in Congress, and to ignore government regulations and regulators, if the 6-3 SCOTUS doesn't declare all regulations of business unconstitutional first.
When the bubble bursts, those who have cash, and lots of it, are in a position to buy companies, properties, and assets for pennies on the dollar. Those companies that were borrowing & rolling over their debt are in a difficult position, and will either go under or sell out.
The other reason for Capital to crash the economy is to re-exert disproportionate leverage over workers. IF I'm correct on this, expect the Recession / Depression that follows to also lead to massive layoffs and unemployment, with Union members being fired en masse, illegally. The last thing that Capital wants is to have millions of unemployed voters having political power, and voting. So the easy solution for Capital is to have the disgruntled masses voting GOP. There, they can lash out with violent rhetoric against Biden & the Democrats, but the Republicans never have to promise them anything economically!
82gradDLSdad said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:
Huh?
I have a feeling that anyone who owns shares of TGT today is NOT in agreement with you and thinking that this is hardly some sort of collapse in TGT stock.
Target hasnt traded this low since October of 2020.
That's a whole lot of investors that are underwater.
You have the mindset of a trader, not an investor.
I have a feeling that you and Cbbass1 werent around for Black Monday of 1987
That's the last time that Target shares plunged as much as they did today.
I remember Black Monday, although I was not invested.
The markets recovered very quickly.
Markets clearly arent recovering quickly.
They arent recovering at all.
Just ask Cathie Wood.
This isnt 1987.
You dont fight the Fed.
It depends on your timeline.
If you have conviction in the companies you are invested in then consider this a sale.
It took 7 years to recover after the 2000 Internet bubble popped.
My strategy is as follows:
1. Buy what I know.
This is advice from Warren Buffet, but it is good advice. If I don't know about something I might research it such that I might eventually be educated about it but I don't buy it if I don't understand the business.
2. Know what I own.
I don't buy an investment because it performed well in the past or because some pundit talked it up. In general I am not trying to trade complex derivatives or invest in instruments that don't interest me even if they can be lucrative. I know my limitations.
3. Understand my tolerance for risk.
I never make trades based on fear or fear-of-missing-out. Fearful people sell perfectly good investments just because they had a bad day/week/month/year. People afraid of missing out often buy only at the tops. I am comfortable buying and holding and buying more and holding some more. I know not everyone is like that, but it fits my risk tolerance. I stopped constantly chasing returns a long time ago. I only place bets at the casino when it is for entertainment purposes only.
4. Diversify
The best returns come from picking a handful of winners and riding them for years, but very few people can consistently pick winners. I am not one of them. During the slumps I don't lose any sleep because I understand my tolerance for risk and have allocated my investments appropriately.
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Summed up: but a low cost S&P500 fund or ETF and keep investing in it week in and week out, buying low, buying high, buying medium. You will be happy in retirement. I am.
Now with all my money I'm getting stupid. A few individual stocks here, a few options there... luckily I have enough money.
And great advice from you CB93....Helping the two oldest GDs in the work force for 2/3 years living below their means. Both have reasonable, but not thru the moon, salaries and have one year salary in emergency funds and investment below 25. Gives a security of control, plus fun. When they see the projections on an interest rate calculator of 10,20,40 year positioning it becomes a real incentive. Using time now saves using more dinero later.calbear93 said:82gradDLSdad said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:
Huh?
I have a feeling that anyone who owns shares of TGT today is NOT in agreement with you and thinking that this is hardly some sort of collapse in TGT stock.
Target hasnt traded this low since October of 2020.
That's a whole lot of investors that are underwater.
You have the mindset of a trader, not an investor.
I have a feeling that you and Cbbass1 werent around for Black Monday of 1987
That's the last time that Target shares plunged as much as they did today.
I remember Black Monday, although I was not invested.
The markets recovered very quickly.
Markets clearly arent recovering quickly.
They arent recovering at all.
Just ask Cathie Wood.
This isnt 1987.
You dont fight the Fed.
It depends on your timeline.
If you have conviction in the companies you are invested in then consider this a sale.
It took 7 years to recover after the 2000 Internet bubble popped.
My strategy is as follows:
1. Buy what I know.
This is advice from Warren Buffet, but it is good advice. If I don't know about something I might research it such that I might eventually be educated about it but I don't buy it if I don't understand the business.
2. Know what I own.
I don't buy an investment because it performed well in the past or because some pundit talked it up. In general I am not trying to trade complex derivatives or invest in instruments that don't interest me even if they can be lucrative. I know my limitations.
3. Understand my tolerance for risk.
I never make trades based on fear or fear-of-missing-out. Fearful people sell perfectly good investments just because they had a bad day/week/month/year. People afraid of missing out often buy only at the tops. I am comfortable buying and holding and buying more and holding some more. I know not everyone is like that, but it fits my risk tolerance. I stopped constantly chasing returns a long time ago. I only place bets at the casino when it is for entertainment purposes only.
4. Diversify
The best returns come from picking a handful of winners and riding them for years, but very few people can consistently pick winners. I am not one of them. During the slumps I don't lose any sleep because I understand my tolerance for risk and have allocated my investments appropriately.
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Summed up: but a low cost S&P500 fund or ETF and keep investing in it week in and week out, buying low, buying high, buying medium. You will be happy in retirement. I am.
Now with all my money I'm getting stupid. A few individual stocks here, a few options there... luckily I have enough money.
Great advices from both of you on investment discipline. I would also add that people should always live below their means and avoid debt other than, when young, mortgage. Financial freedom and not being a slave to money open up so much enjoyment in life.
dimitrig said:
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Yes, the goal is not to "buy low and sell lower".
I would strongly suggest that what's more important is what you do WITH YOUR LOSERS.
No where in your 5 talking points on investing explains what you do with your losers.
The reason that I bring this up is, is because while you waited for 7 years for your account/portfolio to recover from the Dot-Com collapse, the fact of the matter is that it took 17 years for the S&P 500 Information Technology Index to finally break the record it set back in March 2000. - - - Moreover, a ton of those companies are no longer around.
There is a learning curve when it comes to developing a successful methodology to being an investor.
And your risk/reward ratio is only as good as your ability to execute your methodology.
In fact, I would place far more importance on your #2 and "knowing what you own" than your #5.
#5 can literally kill you. Knowing what you own and should be the relevant question here. Because if you own a company or companies that arent able to grow and with a management team that can execute, then it doesnt matter how many times you average down and keep buying their shares. You're going to wind up with a substantial portion of capital deployed in a company that isnt going anywhere.
Knowing how to identify your "losers" and what you do with them should be the single biggest component of your investing methodology. It can help you stay in the game and avoid large drawdowns that literally have you "frozen".
OdontoBear66 said:And great advice from you CB93....Helping the two oldest GDs in the work force for 2/3 years living below their means. Both have reasonable, but not thru the moon, salaries and have one year salary in emergency funds and investment below 25. Gives a security of control, plus fun. When they see the projections on an interest rate calculator of 10,20,40 year positioning it becomes a real incentive. Using time now saves using more dinero later.calbear93 said:82gradDLSdad said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:DiabloWags said:
Huh?
I have a feeling that anyone who owns shares of TGT today is NOT in agreement with you and thinking that this is hardly some sort of collapse in TGT stock.
Target hasnt traded this low since October of 2020.
That's a whole lot of investors that are underwater.
You have the mindset of a trader, not an investor.
I have a feeling that you and Cbbass1 werent around for Black Monday of 1987
That's the last time that Target shares plunged as much as they did today.
I remember Black Monday, although I was not invested.
The markets recovered very quickly.
Markets clearly arent recovering quickly.
They arent recovering at all.
Just ask Cathie Wood.
This isnt 1987.
You dont fight the Fed.
It depends on your timeline.
If you have conviction in the companies you are invested in then consider this a sale.
It took 7 years to recover after the 2000 Internet bubble popped.
My strategy is as follows:
1. Buy what I know.
This is advice from Warren Buffet, but it is good advice. If I don't know about something I might research it such that I might eventually be educated about it but I don't buy it if I don't understand the business.
2. Know what I own.
I don't buy an investment because it performed well in the past or because some pundit talked it up. In general I am not trying to trade complex derivatives or invest in instruments that don't interest me even if they can be lucrative. I know my limitations.
3. Understand my tolerance for risk.
I never make trades based on fear or fear-of-missing-out. Fearful people sell perfectly good investments just because they had a bad day/week/month/year. People afraid of missing out often buy only at the tops. I am comfortable buying and holding and buying more and holding some more. I know not everyone is like that, but it fits my risk tolerance. I stopped constantly chasing returns a long time ago. I only place bets at the casino when it is for entertainment purposes only.
4. Diversify
The best returns come from picking a handful of winners and riding them for years, but very few people can consistently pick winners. I am not one of them. During the slumps I don't lose any sleep because I understand my tolerance for risk and have allocated my investments appropriately.
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Summed up: but a low cost S&P500 fund or ETF and keep investing in it week in and week out, buying low, buying high, buying medium. You will be happy in retirement. I am.
Now with all my money I'm getting stupid. A few individual stocks here, a few options there... luckily I have enough money.
Great advices from both of you on investment discipline. I would also add that people should always live below their means and avoid debt other than, when young, mortgage. Financial freedom and not being a slave to money open up so much enjoyment in life.
82gradDLSdad said:DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Yes, the goal is not to "buy low and sell lower".
I would strongly suggest that what's more important is what you do WITH YOUR LOSERS.
No where in your 5 talking points on investing explains what you do with your losers.
The reason that I bring this up is, is because while you waited for 7 years for your account/portfolio to recover from the Dot-Com collapse, the fact of the matter is that it took 17 years for the S&P 500 Information Technology Index to finally break the record it set back in March 2000. - - - Moreover, a ton of those companies are no longer around.
There is a learning curve when it comes to developing a successful methodology to being an investor.
And your risk/reward ratio is only as good as your ability to execute your methodology.
In fact, I would place far more importance on your #2 and "knowing what you own" than your #5.
#5 can literally kill you. Knowing what you own and should be the relevant question here. Because if you own a company or companies that arent able to grow and with a management team that can execute, then it doesnt matter how many times you average down and keep buying their shares. You're going to wind up with a substantial portion of capital deployed in a company that isnt going anywhere.
Knowing how to identify your "losers" and what you do with them should be the single biggest component of your investing methodology. It can help you stay in the game and avoid large drawdowns that literally have you "frozen".
The 17 years to recover stat is why it's important to be investing, in S&P 500, on the way up, down and sideways. If you just buy when everything looks good it will take you a long time to recover when the crashes come. I was only able to absorb my IBM layoff at age 55 in 2015 because my peak earning years coincided with the great recession. I was loading my 401k, Roth and IBonds before and after having 'lost' 60% in 2008-2009. It wasn't easy but with the benefit of hindsight I look like a genius just because I followed a very tried and true investment axiom. I would be careful with investing in individual stocks if they are forming the basis of your lifetime portfolio. I don't care how well you 'know' them.
82gradDLSdad said:
The 17 years to recover stat is why it's important to be investing, in S&P 500, on the way up, down and sideways. If you just buy when everything looks good it will take you a long time to recover when the crashes come. I was only able to absorb my IBM layoff at age 55 in 2015 because my peak earning years coincided with the great recession. I was loading my 401k, Roth and IBonds before and after having 'lost' 60% in 2008-2009. It wasn't easy but with the benefit of hindsight I look like a genius just because I followed a very tried and true investment axiom. I would be careful with investing in individual stocks if they are forming the basis of your lifetime portfolio. I don't care how well you 'know' them.
Could not agree more. And there is no one way to do it. Assisting those in their 20s, 50s, and 70s it is more of the measure of safety used, obviously increasing with age. Still buying quality, holding and having the funds to protect in down markets like this, works quite well. Yes, sucking up some bad losses right now while this market seeks a bottom, but confidence is given when discouraged to look at the Dow, S&P or Nasty over 20,30, or 40 years. The escalator does go up with intermittent elevator drops. The % exposed to risk reduces with age (and that is key to buy and hold working).DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Yes, the goal is not to "buy low and sell lower".
There is a learning curve when it comes to developing a successful methodology to being an investor.
And your risk/reward ratio is only as good as your ability to execute your methodology.
OdontoBear66 said:But then your RE is part of your diversification.dajo9 said:
Diversifying is important. For years I've been kicking myself for buying real estate instead of just the stock market. Well, right now my real estate is the superstar.
The reason I picked up so quickly is that we have a 50s son who bot RE when he got married in 1994 and it is about 8X now. Crazy, but so. He added to it 4 years ago in Tahoe and we always thought 2nd homes as fun but so-so investments. Wrong. It has doubled. More crazy. I applaud your smarts and it does help when looking at the overall picture. Congrats. Now let the stock market return before the RE market collapses (actually I feel a correction, not a collapse). Haha.dajo9 said:OdontoBear66 said:But then your RE is part of your diversification.dajo9 said:
Diversifying is important. For years I've been kicking myself for buying real estate instead of just the stock market. Well, right now my real estate is the superstar.
That's my point
Sadly, only some of my real estate is in CaliforniaOdontoBear66 said:The reason I picked up so quickly is that we have a 50s son who bot RE when he got married in 1994 and it is about 8X now. Crazy, but so. He added to it 4 years ago in Tahoe and we always thought 2nd homes as fun but so-so investments. Wrong. It has doubled. More crazy. I applaud your smarts and it does help when looking at the overall picture. Congrats. Now let the stock market return before the RE market collapses (actually I feel a correction, not a collapse). Haha.dajo9 said:OdontoBear66 said:But then your RE is part of your diversification.dajo9 said:
Diversifying is important. For years I've been kicking myself for buying real estate instead of just the stock market. Well, right now my real estate is the superstar.
That's my point
Just remember, as with the market TV programs, there is a lot of "sound". You must be the filter.82gradDLSdad said:
I appreciate hearing all the information from what appears to be really smart people on this board. Thank you.
OdontoBear66 said:Just remember, as with the market TV programs, there is a lot of "sound". You must be the filter.82gradDLSdad said:
I appreciate hearing all the information from what appears to be really smart people on this board. Thank you.
I have always looked at engaging in the stock market as a modified form or gambling (in reverse)...But in the sense that if you do diligent homework & have a degree of patience you will be like "the house". You do not need to win them all, just more than you lose. With it, your capital should grow.
DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:
5. Focus on the long term
I started investing while I was in high school (Janus Mutual Funds) and I have never sold a position based on what the broader market was doing. I have, however, added to positions when the broader market sentiment was down and took quality names down with it. As I told a coworker once when the Internet bubble popped and my portfolio took a 50% haircut: "The goal is to buy low and sell high, not buy low and sell lower." It took 7 years to recover from that, but it did recover and then some. To me that was a bigger lesson than some Black Friday selloff.
Yes, the goal is not to "buy low and sell lower".
I would strongly suggest that what's more important is what you do WITH YOUR LOSERS.
No where in your 5 talking points on investing explains what you do with your losers.
The reason that I bring this up is, is because while you waited for 7 years for your account/portfolio to recover from the Dot-Com collapse, the fact of the matter is that it took 17 years for the S&P 500 Information Technology Index to finally break the record it set back in March 2000. - - - Moreover, a ton of those companies are no longer around.
There is a learning curve when it comes to developing a successful methodology to being an investor.
And your risk/reward ratio is only as good as your ability to execute your methodology.
Figuring out the best methodology for your goals takes time.
It doesnt just happen overnight.
In fact, I would place far more importance on your #2 and "knowing what you own" than your #5.
#5 can literally kill you.
Knowing what you own really should be the relevant question here. In fact, it should be the preeminent question here.
Because if you own a company or companies that arent able to grow and have a management team that can execute, then it doesnt matter how many times you average down and keep buying their shares. You're going to wind up with a substantial portion of capital deployed in a company that isnt going anywhere.
Knowing how to identify your "losers" and what you do with them should be the single biggest component of your investing methodology. It can help you stay in the game and avoid large drawdowns that literally have you "frozen" for years.
dimitrig said:
As to when to sell, even well-managed companies can be hurt by competition, deregulation, and other external factors. A big part of when I decide when to sell is if I think I see a better opportunity going forward and I need to raise cash for it. I don't mind being wrong and selling a winner if I replaced it with another (or bigger) winner.
I never like to suggest words for another, but as I read dimitrig, what he says seems very similar to a momentum strategy used by growth investors suggested by Investors Business Daily. You purchase stocks within a Buy Range and hold until their growth becomes extended (I believe they use 20%), then sell, and use the funds for the next purchase in the Buy Range. It certainly does not work in this Confirmed Downtrend, and you can get burnt badly if not watching closely.DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:
As to when to sell, even well-managed companies can be hurt by competition, deregulation, and other external factors. A big part of when I decide when to sell is if I think I see a better opportunity going forward and I need to raise cash for it. I don't mind being wrong and selling a winner if I replaced it with another (or bigger) winner.
So you dont look at a company's valuation relative to its peers in order to judge when to sell it?
For example, determining whether the stock is trading at a discount or a premium to the group?
Or on a historical basis to itself?
Your decision is primarily driven by seeing another opportunity going forward?
I'm trying to understand how you'd even go about making that decision in a disciplined manner.
Do you have some sort of a fixed percentage gain in your head that triggers a sell decision, relative to seeing another opportunity going forward?
A strategy that works for you and it sounds like you have stuck to it with success. Kudos.82gradDLSdad said:OdontoBear66 said:Just remember, as with the market TV programs, there is a lot of "sound". You must be the filter.82gradDLSdad said:
I appreciate hearing all the information from what appears to be really smart people on this board. Thank you.
I have always looked at engaging in the stock market as a modified form or gambling (in reverse)...But in the sense that if you do diligent homework & have a degree of patience you will be like "the house". You do not need to win them all, just more than you lose. With it, your capital should grow.
Well, I'm 62 and have already made more money in the market than I ever thought possible. No gamble. No big research. Just have a career, live cheaply and invest. In fact, the more 'homework' I've done the worse my returns. I do view it as investing in the US economy and not a bit like gambling.
OdontoBear66 said:A strategy that works for you and it sounds like you have stuck to it with success. Kudos.82gradDLSdad said:OdontoBear66 said:Just remember, as with the market TV programs, there is a lot of "sound". You must be the filter.82gradDLSdad said:
I appreciate hearing all the information from what appears to be really smart people on this board. Thank you.
I have always looked at engaging in the stock market as a modified form or gambling (in reverse)...But in the sense that if you do diligent homework & have a degree of patience you will be like "the house". You do not need to win them all, just more than you lose. With it, your capital should grow.
Well, I'm 62 and have already made more money in the market than I ever thought possible. No gamble. No big research. Just have a career, live cheaply and invest. In fact, the more 'homework' I've done the worse my returns. I do view it as investing in the US economy and not a bit like gambling.
82gradDLSdad said:
Thank you. Wish I could take credit for some sort of special knowledge or skill. Luckily I'm a good direction follower. Credit to my parents.
DiabloWags said:82gradDLSdad said:
Thank you. Wish I could take credit for some sort of special knowledge or skill. Luckily I'm a good direction follower. Credit to my parents.
There is something to be said for the Wall Street slogan, Observe what is happening and assume it will continue.
In other words, the Trend is your friend.
Except when it isn't.DiabloWags said:82gradDLSdad said:
Thank you. Wish I could take credit for some sort of special knowledge or skill. Luckily I'm a good direction follower. Credit to my parents.
There is something to be said for the Wall Street slogan, Observe what is happening and assume it will continue.
In other words, the Trend is your friend.
dajo9 said:DiabloWags said:82gradDLSdad said:
Thank you. Wish I could take credit for some sort of special knowledge or skill. Luckily I'm a good direction follower. Credit to my parents.
There is something to be said for the Wall Street slogan, Observe what is happening and assume it will continue.
In other words, the Trend is your friend.
True but also bull markets are slow and tedious while bear markets are fast (relatively) and furious.
cbbass1 said:Except when it isn't.DiabloWags said:82gradDLSdad said:
Thank you. Wish I could take credit for some sort of special knowledge or skill. Luckily I'm a good direction follower. Credit to my parents.
There is something to be said for the Wall Street slogan, Observe what is happening and assume it will continue.
In other words, the Trend is your friend.
DiabloWags said:dimitrig said:
As to when to sell, even well-managed companies can be hurt by competition, deregulation, and other external factors. A big part of when I decide when to sell is if I think I see a better opportunity going forward and I need to raise cash for it. I don't mind being wrong and selling a winner if I replaced it with another (or bigger) winner.
So you dont look at a company's valuation relative to its peers in order to judge when to sell it?
For example, determining whether the stock is trading at a discount or a premium to the group?
Or on a historical basis to itself?
Your decision is primarily driven by seeing another opportunity going forward?
I'm trying to understand how you'd even go about making that decision in a disciplined manner.
Do you have some sort of a fixed percentage gain in your head that triggers a sell decision, relative to seeing another opportunity going forward?
dimitrig said:
If I see one that I don't own which seems more promising than one I do own then I will swap one for the other or sell one and buy more of another.