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From: | Nick Kearney <nk@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Tue, 29 Feb 2000 21:28:44 +1300 |
Osbert Sun wrote: > > Peter Robertson wrote: > > Was just thinking......all those people baling out of > shares, many of them cite that their "stop-loss" has kicked > in, so they sell, ...given the cyclical nature of the > sharemarket, and obviously we are presently near the bottom > (we hope) of a downward wave- we've seen it before... & > before too long things will be rising, well, aren't these > "stop-losses" a bit nonsensical. Personally, I would rather > hang on for the ride, than bale & get depressed. You might > say "Oh yeah, but what if you can't afford to lose the > money".. but surely if you can't afford to lose the money, > why be in the market. To my mind this "STOP-LOSS" mentality > could be what is ailing our market. > > Good question Peter! "Stop-loss" is mainly practiced by market traders > to: (i) protect themselves from heavy losses in stocks of extremely > risky nature, and (ii) protect against "profit-erosion" in a falling > market. Personally I don't use stop-losses unless I'm sure that the > market will be falling further and that the same stocks could be > picked up again at a much attractive price later. As far as I can see > our market is in a "confused" stage at present and that it's very hard > to tell which way the market is to go. So I'd rather sit tight and > wait than exit my positions prematurely. However, I do select my > stocks based on some fundamental factors thus I'm not too concerned if > the market does fall further. > > Regards, > Osbert Sun Yeah but ever heard of opportunity cost? Makes sense to get out and put your hard earned $$$ into something that is winning. You can sit as long as you want in a share and watch the ADV's of this world escape you. Or you can pull out, save not only future paper loss but in fact gain on a better share. Don't you think? Chers NK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please us the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.html.
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