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Strategies & Market Trends : Young and Older Folk Portfolio -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: chowder who wrote (2717)5/14/2024 1:38:52 PM
From: cemanuel10 Recommendations

Recommended By
agniv
ALinVA
chowder
dan1944
ddbpaso

and 5 more members

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21937
 
This is why in the past, I have thought that people should start out as traders. As a trader you need to learn how to position size, know when to cut losses, when to add and when adding, know whether to do so in small increments or large.

People sometimes laugh when I tell them one of the most valuable things for me as an investor was my experience as a horse trainer.

When you train, the money you actually make from people paying you to train their horses is a relatively small % of the total. Sure, it keeps some traffic coming through the barn and helps a bit with the monthly cash flow but the real money is in buying a horse, training it for a little while - or just having a possible buyer lined up before you ever bought it - and selling at a profit.

I used to tell people that my financial success wasn't based on the % of right vs wrong calls I made. More than anything, it was quickly recognizing I'd made a wrong buy and get that horse out of my barn quick, even at a loss. Every day it was in my barn it was eating my feed, using up my labor, and taking up a stall that might be used for a horse I could turn a profit on.

This was very good prep for buying a stock and after a little while realizing I was wrong about it and selling. I got pretty good at cutting my losses. And I never understood people saying, "I'll sell when I get back to even." Take your lumps, sell at a loss, and rather than having your capital tied up in a loser, put it into something that will make you money.

Though trading SDRL almost daily in mid-2017 was entertaining. ;)



To: chowder who wrote (2717)5/14/2024 4:53:51 PM
From: Max2.02 Recommendations

Recommended By
chowder
livwell

  Respond to of 21937
 
That is something I am working on also. I don't like selling shares win or lose. I need to keep focused on the fact that a loss is historical thing. In the present I can only evaluate whether the depressed stock is going to outperform some other stock going forward. If the answer is no, time to cut bait.

I got that thought process from you Chowder earlier this year. And I did some housecleaning. So thanks!



To: chowder who wrote (2717)5/15/2024 6:26:11 AM
From: jvincen29 Recommendations

Recommended By
ArsenalFC
cemanuel
chowder
ddbpaso
jopapgh

and 4 more members

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21937
 
Chowder, I can still recall one thing that had me read you more often way back. it was that "play portfolios" using imaginary money were something you never did. I also never understood why anyone would do that either and think the very best lessons, ones you always remember start out with real money.

Trading with your own hard earned funds will teach you fast many market lessons that can make you successful in longer term investing, fake monopoly money won't ever do that. And anyone saying they never paid any stock market lesson "tuition money" is not being truthful imo.

Mistakes get made one time only, doing the very same thing twice is no longer a mistake.
Vince

Been really busy with other things but reading daily.