I stop loss after a profound run up and that's so I can buy back in after the inevitable pull back dips further than the stop loss. Ride the next run up. Rinse, repeat
Originally Posted by -King-:
Regarding your 10% rule. I do agree with you but what if you were early on a stock that blew up. For example, I was earlyish on Tesla and bought a bunch in the 75-200 range pre split. For that reason it's well over 10% of my total account value. Would you say that's the exception to your rule or would you try to diversify away from it and lower the percentage?
It about entering a trade with no more than 10% of your account, not about how much that stocks gains and results in it being more than 10% of your account value. [Reply]
Originally Posted by KCUnited:
I stop loss after a profound run up and that's so I can buy back in after the inevitable pull back dips further than the stop loss. Ride the next run up. Rinse, repeat
But I barely know what I'm doing so YMMV
At some point you won’t be trading in a bullish market and buying back in on a dip could result in your capital being tied up in a losing position (no stop loss on entry) for a long time if it doesn’t pivot and reverse trend. That’s where reading charts and technical analysis can make it at least better than guessing. [Reply]
Clay, can you provide any examples of stocks over $10? :-)
How long did you stay in IQ, what was the loss?
Also you realize getting stopped out doesn’t mean you can’t re-enter later? You’re acting like these $1-2 stocks that went south after you bought them had 100% certainty to go back up. That’s not always the case. The chart could tell you later if it makes a strong pivot and should be bought back in. [Reply]
Originally Posted by lewdog:
At some point you won’t be trading in a bullish market and buying back in on a dip could result in your capital being tied up in a losing position (no stop loss on entry) for a long time if it doesn’t pivot and reverse trend. That’s where reading charts and technical analysis can make it at least better than guessing.
Agreed on chart reading and finding bullish opportunities in a bear market [Reply]
Originally Posted by lewdog:
It about entering a trade with no more than 10% of your account, not about how much that stocks gains and results in it being more than 10% of your account value.
So after maxing out a 401K, IRA, HSA, and having a 6 month emergency fund, would the minimum goal of investing all other funds be to simply gain more than your mortgage interest rate?