tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
- Joined
- 14 October 2004
- Posts
- 20,447
- Reactions
- 6,477
Oh, the irony.
Mate that is not true. If you use CFDs or straight stocks you still lose the same amount because you do not position size with leverage as the deciding factor.
Huh? Eg normal share $5, buy $1000 worth of shares = $1000
CFD leveraged share @ 95% $1000 worth of CFDs = $20000
Share price goes down $1
Shares = lose $200
CFD = lose $4000
???
Its not hard to answer my questions and give a proper explanation but all you two guys seems to be interested in is avoid everything I ask and hell bent on proving you're superior like some ego maniac.
Thanks Lone Wolf thats a nice summery of how we got here.
Iro I wasn't being insulting or not trying to be, just trying to point you to where you need to start.
Well I didn't take my Valium for breakfast. ...
Why put in the effort( I ask myself ) in the first place? ...
Because some of us are on the sidelines, reading (perhaps bemused,...)
and learning.
A few observations:
1. Please keep this thread on topic. I don't want to see it degenerate into insults and off topic posts.
2. This is a thread for newbies to ask questions so please take it easy on them. Everyone has to start somewhere and it takes time to gain knowledge and experience. Encourage those who are just starting their stock market journey, don't tear strips off them.
3. Let's keep this thread positive and constructive. That was the way it was conceived initially by Sir O, and that's the way I'd like to see it continue.
It might be worthwhile if I detailed out an example of a positional sizing method. Would all the newbies like this?
Sir O
Guys, feel free to call me stupid (i am a noob) but if the share price for a stock is the bare minimum at 0.001 and goes upto 0.002 your investment has been doubled? or is it multiplied by whatever when it gets to 1 cent (0.010)?
Got it Barney
Decimal point has moved in your chart!
Guys, feel free to call me stupid (i am a noob) but if the share price for a stock is the bare minimum at 0.001 and goes upto 0.002 your investment has been doubled? or is it multiplied by whatever when it gets to 1 cent (0.010)?
Thankyou Sir O,... positional sizing method. Would all the newbies like this?
Sir O
Ah yes ...... Value of TNR is one tenth of a cent not one cent .... sorry for any confusion.
So AG, my explanation still works, but when I said 1 cent and 2 cents I meant the 0.001 and 0.002 cents you were asking about.
I blame sleep deprivation ... forex is murder on my sleeping habits
Hi AG,
Your investment has doubled in gross value. But then subtract brokerage, subtract tax and any other miscellaneous costs (Internet, newspapers, magazines, ...etc.)
You may well want .010 after taking all that into account!
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?