Value Collector
Have courage, and be kind.
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I think what he means is that you might not be able to purchase more shares once you have deducted your Capital gains tax and trading costs.Back at the grind after a week of flu so pretty hectic.
Will answer when I can.
Peter what about the extra shares you would be able to purchase when re purchasing at the lower rate plus the extra dividends on the extra shares you would have.?
Open | Gain | Close | mths in trade | |||
Apr 2016 - March 17 | $3.00 | 101% | $6.03 | 11 | ||
Jan 2019 - Aug 2019 | $6.03 | 62% | $9.77 | 7 | ||
Sept 2019 - March 2020 | $9.77 | 5.60% | $10.32 | 6 | ||
April 2020-Sept 2020 | $10.32 | 44% | $14.85 | 5 | ||
Oct 2020 - March 2021 | $14.85 | 17.40% | $17.44 | 5 | ||
Apr 2021 - Aug 2021 | $17.44 | -1.50% | $17.18 | 4 | ||
Growth over period | 573% | 38 |
Agreed, definitely play to your strengths, that’s what I do, it is interesting to break it down to understand the pros and cons of both options though, because a lot of the time the truth of situations is counter intuitive.Good Thread
Buy and Hold vs. Trading??
Some are good at "evaluating" longer term value. (Investing?)
Some are good at "evaluating" shorter term value (Trading?)
Neither are better or worse in my view
Play to your strengths!
ps "Strength" is realized through experience
I meant to add this chart to my post re FMG back test trade.This sounds like an argument I had with a mate who is a sit and hold tragic - not that there is a lot wrong with sit and hold if that is your trading plan. He had held BHP for several years and had great dividends off it but no capital growth while an active trade over the same period would have returned him a great profit (I didn't take the exercise to the point of seeing if the hold period covered the shares exdividend date).
For what it is worth I did a quick active trade on FMG using simple rules (see below) which reminded me that it is a bugger to trade because it breaks stop losses only to immediately recover. Anyway, 5 of the 6 trades were positive and the one that was a loss only fell by 1.5%. Overall profit was 573% with active trades open for 38 weeks out of 64.
Open Gain Close mths in trade Apr 2016 - March 17 $3.00 101% $6.03 11Jan 2019 - Aug 2019 $6.03 62% $9.77 7Sept 2019 - March 2020 $9.77 5.60% $10.32 6April 2020-Sept 2020 $10.32 44% $14.85 5Oct 2020 - March 2021 $14.85 17.40% $17.44 5Apr 2021 - Aug 2021 $17.44 -1.50% $17.18 4Growth over period 573% 38
Sell Rules:
15% stop loss on buy in price or higher weekly trough
Two consecutive weekly closes below 12 week uptrend lines
Buy rules
2 consecutive weekly closes above a 12 week downtrend plus confirmation of new 12 week uptrend
If break of uptrend does not form a valid weekly downtrend then buy on break to high side.
This was done quickly - so no guarantees as to accuracy.
that is an interesting twist ( although in theory index ETFs were designed for BIG players to trade the trends )No I meant VAS (vanguard asx 300 index etf)
Buy and Hold vs. Trading??
Yeah Cheers Tech. I'm late to the party here.Just b6 the way the thread title is Joe Blows
when he moved the discussion from the FMG thread
This sounds like an argument I had with a mate who is a sit and hold tragic - not that there is a lot wrong with sit and hold if that is your trading plan. He had held BHP for several years and had great dividends off it but no capital growth while an active trade over the same period would have returned him a great profit (I didn't take the exercise to the point of seeing if the hold period covered the shares exdividend date).
For what it is worth I did a quick active trade on FMG using simple rules (see below) which reminded me that it is a bugger to trade because it breaks stop losses only to immediately recover. Anyway, 5 of the 6 trades were positive and the one that was a loss only fell by 1.5%. Overall profit was 573% with active trades open for 38 weeks out of 64.
Open Gain Close mths in trade Apr 2016 - March 17 $3.00 101% $6.03 11Jan 2019 - Aug 2019 $6.03 62% $9.77 7Sept 2019 - March 2020 $9.77 5.60% $10.32 6April 2020-Sept 2020 $10.32 44% $14.85 5Oct 2020 - March 2021 $14.85 17.40% $17.44 5Apr 2021 - Aug 2021 $17.44 -1.50% $17.18 4Growth over period 573% 38
Sell Rules:
15% stop loss on buy in price or higher weekly trough
Two consecutive weekly closes below 12 week uptrend lines
Buy rules
2 consecutive weekly closes above a 12 week downtrend plus confirmation of new 12 week uptrend
If break of uptrend does not form a valid weekly downtrend then buy on break to high side.
This was done quickly - so no guarantees as to accuracy.
I wasn't trying to make a case for either method - although I expected the active trade to have done better than it did. If you bought in at $3 and today's price is $15 the sit and hold plan made a profit of 400%. I haven't looked at dividends but they wouldn't have made another 173%. You also need to consider the time cost of money. The sit and hold investor had his capital tied up for the full 5 years while the active trader's capital was only invested in the stock for a bit more than half as long.I am just trying to understand your trades there, would you have actually out performed a buy and hold from $3 after the trading costs, CGT and the dividends missed?
I don’t want to go into the full explanation again because it’s been explained above multiple times, but you have to also take into account the multiple times the trader paid Capital gains tax at full price, where as the buy and hold guy hasn’t paid any tax yet, and when he does eventually pay he will get a 50% discount.I wasn't trying to make a case for either method - although I expected the active trade to have done better than it did. If you bought in at $3 and today's price is $15 the sit and hold plan made a profit of 400%. I haven't looked at dividends but they wouldn't have made another 173%. You also need to consider the time cost of money. The sit and hold investor had his capital tied up for the full 5 years while the active trader's capital was only invested in the stock for a bit more than half as long.
Also the trading plan I used was the simplest I could think of - so it was easy to apply. FMG had two big falls which made a range of sell signals a more sophisticated trading plan might have avoided.
I retired at 36, so my daily bread is funded by investments outside super.Plenty of talk about the evils of CGT, however, within an SMSF these considertaions are of less or no concern, since taxation may be 15% or 7.5% in accumulation mode and 0% in pension mode.
Ahh - the joys of mathematics. I guess I've always ignored tax because everyone's situation is different. I use a super fund with some carried forward losses from some long gone business dealings - and being a relatively small trader, for me the raw trading profit is all I'm looking at. I suspect for someone on a marginal rate of say 25% there probably isn't much real difference in the end result of a trader vs investor. However, one thing the analysis does overlook is how bloody good was an investment in FMG 5-6 years ago when you look at a 100% pa return and consider how many traders ever make a100% average return year in, year out.I retired at 36, so my daily bread is funded by investments outside super.
but even so, the point of taxation is still very relevant even at the lower tax rates of super.
for example let’s say you have $100 capital base, and earn 100% return each year as a trader paying 15% tax
Year 1 $100 > $200 - $15 tax = $185
Year 2 $185 > $375 - $28 tax = $347
Year 3 $375 > $750 - $56 tax = $694
now the buy and hold guy, that doesn’t get tax along the way but still gets the 100% return.
Year 1 $100 > $200 = $200
Year 2 $200 > $400 = $400
Year 3 $400 > $800 = $800
See how even though they are both earning the same return, but the tax man taking his cut along the way is putting a headwind in front of the trader, so his capital is not compounding at the same rate, trading costs add to this also.
that’s why I am saying these examples that ignore tax are not accurate, and that the trader will have to be earning a much higher rate just to break even.
Yes the buy hold guy will have to pay tax eventually, but perhaps only after years or decades of the compounding game, and only at half the tax rate.
for me personally I am in the highest tax bracket, so a difference between 45% and 22.5% is huge, especially if the 45% was being charged each year along the way.
A great deal has to do with the Capital your trading with.Ahh - the joys of mathematics. I guess I've always ignored tax because everyone's situation is different. I use a super fund with some carried forward losses from some long gone business dealings - and being a relatively small trader, for me the raw trading profit is all I'm looking at. I suspect for someone on a marginal rate of say 25% there probably isn't much real difference in the end result of a trader vs investor. However, one thing the analysis does overlook is how bloody good was an investment in FMG 5-6 years ago when you look at a 100% pa return and consider how many traders ever make a100% average return year in, year out.
@Value Collector
Why are you in the highest tax bracket if your retired.
where is your income coming from and why is it at the
high end? Does your wife work?
He did say he bought his first shares at 14 so he had a head start, 22 years to build his empire.You have 350,000 FMG shares?
I find your situation nothing short of amazing.
You mentioned you retired at 36 so if you had a University
education you would have worked for approx. 14 years.
Did you develop an app or something.
To amass what you have in 14 years given the early start you have mentioned in
all your long term share holdings plus real estate which would require equity
to satisfy banks its one of the most remarkable 14 year or so stories I seen.
Think you'd have to admit its not normal.
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