Realist
Billie Jean is not my lover
- Joined
- 1 June 2006
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Ha but you would`ve had to get the timing completely right or substantialy right,otherwise you would`ve ended up paying capital tax and reinvested a part of your profits to buy back in and if you did it too early you would be sitting on a loss anyway,I know because I did just that,haaaaaaaaaaFor instance even if you were a buy-and-holder, simple technical analysis would have told you that the uptrend of most blue chip stocks was broken in May, and that selling out at the end of this trend, and buying at the resumption of the next uptrend (obviously you can't pick the start of a trend, but if we're talking long-term then its a given that you'll notice it eventually), then is that a more efficient use of your capital?
Realist said:The age old argument....
Does anyone agree that Buy and "Hope" (hold) is the most risky method?
I was reading Leon Wilson's "The business of share trading" book tonight and he believes trading is far less risky than buy and "hope". He was slagging the hell out of it as something only suitable for retired people.
How can buying an excellent bluechip that is not overpriced and pays good dividends be riskier than trading a speculative stock that has never made a profit?
His belief is people will hold on too long if the price is going down and they could lose all their money, HIH, OneTel, Enron etc.
Sure it is possible, but diversifying so that no more than 10% of your investments is in one stock you'll lose at most 10% in the worst case scenario. And few if any bluechips ever just go belly up.
The flipside is you don't pay tax, or brokerage fees, there is no slippage, and no stress, you reinvest dividends and large companies tend to get bigger, small companies are far more likely to go under. And you do not need a stop loss because you mostly don't lose.
Trading is so hard to make a profit, it takes many hours of your time, you get slippage on your buy and sell prices, you pay brokerage fees and get hammered with a large tax rate. You usally miss out on dividends as well.
Amusingly he quotes Warren Buffett in his book, does he not realise Buffett is a buy and hold man?
wayneL said:Hi Realist,
I can only re-iterate the point I made in another thread. It's the small business person, doing this for income + a bit of compounding, versus strictly investment for wealthbuilding.
I do this for income... buy & hold just don't cut it as far as that is concerned, though I have nothing against buy & hold per se'.
I get a bit disappointed with techies who go down this line of argumement, because its as much BS as them bagging trading.
Chalk and Cheese
Snake Pliskin said:Yes one has to work out what they are in the market for.
wayneL said:I trade so I don't end up In the bookies ring at the races:
I think it's insanity holding onto stocks when they're not moving or depreciating. It makes no sense.
Realist said:It makes sense to me, because Investors look at the company not the stock price, And traders look at the stock price not the company.
Realist said:And never margin lend
Anyone out there 50/50? ie 50% 'Buy & Hope' and 50% 'trader'???? Personally I see myself as 75%BH and 25% trader........
Gearing is a powerful way to build wealth.
the_godfather4 said:Anyone out there 50/50? ie 50% 'Buy & Hope' and 50% 'trader'????
Realist said:I agree Dennis. Leverage is one of the true keys to wealth creation.
10% return on $10,000 is $1,000.
10% return on $500,000 is $50,000 (less the 7% $35,000 loan) is $15,000.
But...
A 10% loss on $10,000 is $1,000
A 10% loss on $500,000 is $50,000 (less the 7% $35,000 loan) is $85,000!!
That is the danger of course!!!
Without loans most people could never make money on property. Or even buy property in the first place.
But it is important to realise that most people with mortgages are not rich and most mortgage brokers and banks are.
You pay the interest on a loan whether your house goes up or down, or your porfolio goes up or down.
Some people may be getting margin calls soon.
I may get a margin loan in the future, and I will get a mortgage, but boy will I be careful.
dennisll said:I have found it very advantageous to maintain two distinct portfolios as I get to practice trading whilst being able to build a good solid base of investments. It also keeps everything neat for tax time.
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