- Joined
- 18 February 2017
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You're a flaming galah! The name of the game is to manage risk, you're trying to manage the reward!
Little understood FACT : you can't manage reward, you can ONLY manage risk!
I see your point and will make sure I have risk in mind and look into risk management....
But don't investors have a goal in mind in terms of what reward they hope for?
I thought it best to have a goal in mind to then determine what types of stocks I invest in: high, medium, or low risk stocks.
I would not just lump in on one stock. I'd spread my money across a variety of stocks and have a diversified portfolio to help manage risk.
Hello everyone. I'm from the UK....
Not sure how I ended up here, but I guess I started looking at commodities and it led me to Australia and Australian companies. I assume you guys are the mining gurus?
I am a complete newbie to stocks / commodities which may just be about to be proved to you.....
I ideally need to double or triple my money within one year.
I fear that may be an unrealistic possibility, but I'll go on anyway.....
I have £70,000 GBP or $113,000 AUD. Ideally I would not want to pump the whole of my £70,000 into this, maybe £50,000 max.
-What is your advice on the best way of achieving this? Feel free to tell me I'm a flaming galah for even hoping to double/triple my money within a year.
Are commodity related stocks a good route to take? I have been looking into Uranium, Lithium, and I'm soon to look into Gold.
Would it be best to place my £50,000 this way:
£10,000 on my most bullish stock or commodity.
£35,000 split into lots of £5000 and invested into 7 different stocks/commodities.
£5000 invested into speculative picks in amounts of £1000 or £2000.
I am prepared to go speculative and high risk with some stocks, but with low stakes of £1000-£2000. I am not too fussed about risking £5000 total on speculative investments.
I plan to do a lot of research before placing any money down.
It's not essential that I double or triple my money, but that would be the aim.
Or is it simply the wrong time to get into the stock market? Am I coming in at the wrong time. We are due a recession. The whole reason I want to double or triple my money is to buy a property. Maybe a recession will bring the ridiculous house prices in the UK down.
Any advice would be great. Thanks.
It is very hard and not practical in the long term
Who's talking about the long term? He wants to do it in one year.
All he has to do is pick the right stock now. How difficult can it be?
The right stocks 12 months ago, all in the ASX 100 were:
FMG returned 266%
BSL returned 132%
S32 returned 123%
DOW returned 117%
or a little more adventurous
WHC returned 559% and was in the ASX 200
Of course you could have picked a wrong one like:
SGH returned -72.22%
BAL returned -62.75%
SRX returned -57.36%
EHE returned -55.73%
Hab
I agree
I think he would be better off learning how to manage short term trades.
Use say 75% of equity in no more than 2 trades risking no more than 5% on each trade (Position sizing only)
and ratchetting his initial stop loss as quick as he can and dumping a position if it moves from profit to B/E in two days. There are around 60 stocks whos price has trebled at sometime in the last 12 mths with liquidity over $500K.
Staying with those on the move and dumping VERY quickly those that don't stay in profit.
He has to learn
Entry
Exit
Position sizing
Initial stop loss (You'd want to cut that initial 5% risk really quickly)
Ratchetting Initial Stop
Pyramiding
OR learning to trade index futures where he could trade up to 5 lots easily.
You couldn't work and be successful at either option. Would need 100% attention during all trading hrs.
Mind you in Futures you could have a 2 hr trading day--but you wont know when that is before hand.
He would need to spend a great deal of time on sim in either equities or futures.
Do able but would need to be very very good.
If he ended up being that good why would he stop at 1 year---and there lies another story.
By the way I'm a duck not a financial guru.
Maybe you can double it for the first time but what about the second time or the third time when luck runs out. This type of thinking sounds more like a casino gambler....
Putting all your money in one stock as a first time investor is madness.
False hope is being given at the detriment of who???
tech, you would agree that there is no possible way for a complete newbie to learn all this even if he took a whole year without trading, and that doesn't meet his objective.
More chance of achieving your goal by betting it all on red of black in one spin
I'd encourage you to change your thinking on this whole endeavor and embrace a get rich slow mentality.
He doesn't want a second or third time. He wants to double or triple his money only once in one year, by then the house prices in the UK will have dropped and he can buy a property.
I would not just lump in on one stock. I'd spread my money across a variety of stocks and have a diversified portfolio to help manage risk.
I disagree with equating my goals to a red/black roulette spin.
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