skc
Goldmember
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- 12 August 2008
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SKC. For what it's worth, I'm following this thread with interest. My MM leaves a good bit to be desired and it's good to follow someone else's methods for FA and MM.
Cheers for sharing this with us,
Capn.
You would start with an overarching framework of position sizing... more stable stocks can afford larger sizes, more volatile stocks smaller size, near-death stocks probably amounts that are inconsequential. This is the first part of risk management.
The second part is the ability to brutally, honestly and correctly assess fundamental facts surrounding the company, and sell when those facts demonstrate (to whatever confidence level the investor deemed appropriate) that the valuation of the company has changed for the worse. This is as good a stop as any price-based stop.
With time based stop I would adopt that when I have a 'time based' event entry... there is a takeover brewing and I will exit in 3 months if nothing comes. You also size your position accordingly. I think if no takeover comes the stock will fall 10%, so I am comfortable allocating $X to the position. This would be similar to the 2% rule (which is start with controlling how much you lose), but it's application is not as precise.
As to judging fundamental reasons - that's a case by case basis so a bit difficult to say here. Market reaction to news will always depend on its starting point and expectations. Is a resource of 200m Tonnes of copper good or bad news? Good if the expectation was 0, bad if the expectation was 500m. Mis-interpreting expectations and news is bad for fundamental investing without a doubt. The same as mis-interpreting price action and volume is bad for technical analysis.
Cheers SKC,
I'm enjoying this thread. Your proving what a tough 6 months it's been.
Keep up the great work.:bricks1:
I second that
Anyone who puts up as much detail on an on going trading summary deserves support.
Have you ever thought of a method filter such as
An equity filter IE if your equity chart falls x then paper trade until it returns to an up trend thus preserving open capital
OR
An index filter similar but only take long trades of the index is trending.
OR
Hedging by way of an index short trade where appropriate
Just tossing random ideas around.
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