Originally Posted by Iowanian:
I'm curious on the thought process of more seasoned traders.
Example. Casino Stocks.
I bought in near the bottom of MGM and ERI. ERI has been a rocket ride and I'm up 160%. How far does a guy push the trend on things like that when the economy is just kicking into gear?
That stock is at $45.63 at this time and the high was around $70 when Rona showed up. Does your method lean towards chasing it back to the top, or cashing out a nice clip? Cash out half?
I've got similar going in other sectors like oil......and I've bought enough X at the bottom to offset the ass kicking I got on it buying at the top....and I'm within $.60 of breaking even there. I'm torn between jumping out when I'm green or hoping long term plays pay off for X, GE etc...
Just depends. If you're in it because you're bored and are doing it for the competitive factor, chase it.
If you're in it for capital retention, get your purchase price back, then put a trailing stop in. [Reply]
Originally Posted by scho63:
The level of pessimism being bandied about is pretty surreal. Markets normally never go down when things are this pessimistic.
Lots of good value in the market. I bumped up my 401K contributions to the MAX at Amazon, including a good chunk going into AMZN stock.
"Bull Markets begin on Pessimism,
Grow on Skepticism,
Flourish on Optimism
and Die on Euphoria."
Originally Posted by oaklandhater:
Opening up too fast/too early might make a bad situation worse. I don't expect to see an economic recovery for a very long time.
Originally Posted by scho63:
You will be very wrong once again. We will see a powerful "V" shaped recovery in spite of you and all the Dems hoping things stay shitty until the election.