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I was going to comment on that...but thought better.If your investing long term, you won't be wanting stop losses. I know that's going to stir a few people up!
There's plenty of research that says investors reduce their potential gains by churning in and out of stocks to often. If your serious about the long term, you have to be prepared to ride out the dips. If you try to take profits every time the price falls, chances are you'll just end up selling at the bottom of a dip and buying back in later at a higher price.
Review your portfolio every so often and get rid of the stocks that have lost their potential then.
Stop losses are important for traders, but won't help a long term investor.
Ferret
I was going to comment on that...but thought better.
Stop loss orders when used to lock in profit do just that...lock it in!
U always run the risk of getting stopped out on a small dip and then miss out as the stock
takes off again....so timing is important...as is position size...perhaps only locking
half your profits in is better than nothing.
Long term Buy and hold type investors...are kidding them selfs if they
think they didn't lose a bundle in the last few weeks.
The money/profit was real enough if u took it out.
well im a newbie and just lost 5% in my first ever trade. didnt have a stop loss which i should have at around 2% but at least i learnt a lesson in their value. i thought id play it safe and invest in a bank for my first trade..
I could have stayed longterm but im not interested in that until things settle down a bit. stop losses ~2% from now on!!
To clarify: I'm not looking to be a short-term trader. At least not initially. I'd not sleep well at night and spend too much time on the internet. I'm stressing just thinking about it.
I don't believe I'd panic and sell stocks chosen for the long term during a market downturn. I was planning on choosing a major bank and something like WES or WOW for the first trades- boring stuff.
I have rental income (no mortgage) from a residential investment property and am down to about $10,000 on the home we live in, plus employment income. No money-draining 'toys'. On paper property assets of about $320,000 (investment)+ $550,000 (home). So, world will not come to an end if I see stock prices fall in line with the market.
Sure, long term holders have lost money over the last few months - but they'll get it back and more over the next few years. It's easy to say you would have locked in profit by selling a few weeks ago, but that's trading with hindsight.
If your stop loss takes you out of a stock, when do you jump back in? Too soon and you'll stop out again with a loss this time, too late and you've lost the gain you would have made if you'd stayed in. Getting it right is timing the market and that is very, very difficult. If you have the time to ride out the dips, its far easier and a safer bet to do just that.
And don't forget that each time you churn your stocks, you're up for capital gains tax and brokerage!
Ferret
errr..stop loss at the top only...didn't make that clear, buy and hold at the bottom...and i didn'tNice work with WOW. I'm glad you made some money on it.
Trading a range like that is a good strategy. Its no different from what I said earlier - review your portfolio every so often and get rid of the stocks when they have lost their potential. You're using the upper and lower lines as the criteria for whether WOW has potential.
This is a bit different from using stop losses though. A stop loss would have kicked you out of your latest WOW purchase with a loss.
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