you feel like a genius. It is too bad that some folks don't
remember what happened in 2000. Of course, right now we are in one of those
genius phases.
Your broker and financial planner are encouraging you to
buy, buy, buy. And I can't fault that at this time. You remember back in 2000
how many times they told you to buy, buy, buy while the market was going down,
down, down. Are we in another of those periods now that are leading up to a
humongous crash? Hey, I don't predict, but I do listen to the voice of the
market.
The great Wall Street mantra is "buy a good stock and
put it away". Did you keep WorldCom and Global Crossing? Even if these
were exceptions because of fraud a smart investor would not have lost any
money. In fact he could have made a nice profit. But Al, they went under! Yes,
I know, but the smart money still made out because they sold near the top.
As a former exchange member and floor trader I was not right
every time I bought something and I especially did not like giving back nice
profits that had accumulated. You don't have to be psychic to know when to sell
and don't think you are going to be able to pick the top. A really smart trader
waits for a stock or fund to start up and then jumps on it with both feet. When
it starts down he jumps off looking for another equity that is going up. The
wise trader knows he can't buy the bottom and sell the top. What he wants is a
big bite out of the middle.
When you make a sandwich most of the meat is in the center
and a professional trader does the same with his trading. He wants to take a
bite out of the middle of the move. You can do this too by looking for stocks,
mutual funds or Exchange Traded Funds that have a nice upward pattern. As I
said before buying is not the secret. Then what is?
You must learn to sell - for two reasons. First to protect
your equity after your initial purchase and second to keep from giving back
profits you have made as the equity advances. The great Wall Street secret is
an exit strategy: knowing when to sell. Unless you learn to sell you will not
be successful in the market. Brokerage companies do not want you to sell and
rarely issue sell signals. You must decide how much you are willing to risk
before you buy.
The simplest way is with a percentage stop loss order of 5%,
7%, 10%, 12%, whatever you can live with. Instruct your broker to place a
trialing stop or you can change it yourself every week. Do not lower a stop.
Selling is the great secret you will never hear from your
broker.
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