- Joined
- 22 August 2008
- Posts
- 914
- Reactions
- 20
Hi KTP - sorry for the delay in responding to you..life gets busy sometimes.
Respectfully KTP we are going to disagree on that. I find Tech and Fund together to be essential, but as I have always said...use what works for you. If you find TA confuses your assessment..don't use it. I added the simple tech assessment for you to show you a different perspective than your own.
OK so long as you are satisfied that you have valid reasons for your actions its probably best not to dwell.
Cheers
Sir O
Hi Sir O and thank you for the post.
I have to admit that I was often curious about combining fundamental and technical approach but has recently come to a conclusion that the two are mutually exclusive.
Respectfully KTP we are going to disagree on that. I find Tech and Fund together to be essential, but as I have always said...use what works for you. If you find TA confuses your assessment..don't use it. I added the simple tech assessment for you to show you a different perspective than your own.
Too often, the two will give an exactly opposite conclusion and you have to pick one or the other. Picking a middle ground usually results in doing both approaches badly.
I really, really, really don't want to start a TA vs FA subject. I'll give a quick overview of my opinion below, but if someones wants to discuss this topic in greater detail, could they please start a separate thread
For my own investments, I found it best to completely ignore any technical signals. My game is to buy companies that are substantially under-valued, and wait for that value to be realized, which usually takes a few years. Looking for proper time to enter or exit has never proven to be consistently correct for me, but has caused me to miss some great opportunities. My typical successful investment will return 100%+ over the next few years, missing out on it to get a few extra percent is just not worth it.
Another part of my game is that I expect a large number of investments to not work out. Around 20%-50% I would expect to lose me money. But there's no way to tell (in my opinion), which ones those will be until I hold them for a few years. And this is the biggest reason I don't use stop losses.
For strategies that have a higher than 50% expected success rate, simple maths tells us that averaging down (or up), will make a positive contribution. That is why I average down. And up. Sometimes.
I do sometimes venture into something different, something like FGE and IRI trades, but these are rare and out of character. I will certainly continue to put money into these when I see them, but I don't see them ever becoming my bread and butter.
PMP buy and sell were in accordance with above. I bought it according to my fundamental principles and sold it when I considered that I made a mistake in my fundamental principles. I deliberately ignored any technical signals when making those two decisions.
OK so long as you are satisfied that you have valid reasons for your actions its probably best not to dwell.
Cheers
Sir O