mathjak107
Well-known Member
- Location
- bayside ,queens , ny
the funny thing is while we all like buying dips the reality is trying to buy low and sell high has lost more money for investors than any other mantra .
for one thing to buy the dips means you have to have un-invested cash sitting around . as peter lynch said more money has been lost or given up in anticipation of or in preparation for a down turn then has been lost in any downturn .
since markets are up 2/3's of the time and down only about 1/3 you rarely make enough in a dip unless you are a great timer then you gave up by not being invested with that money on the sideline .
the biggest problem is no one knows what is low .we all thought low in 2008 was when the markets fell 2000 points . well who knew we had 4000 more to go .
so many were either stopped out when limits were hit or they just plain panicked and bailed or realized they did not get a deal at all and threw in the towel.
so what has made the most money ?
buy high and sell higher , the trend is your friend .
in a dip odds are after you buy next stop is lower as objects in motion stay in motion . when going up , next stop is usually higher and you have to be pretty unlucky to lose money and be that person at the end of the line before a reversal .
so the point is i don't usually keep uninvested cash waiting for that proverbial dip as rarely do i make back what i gave up keeping that cash .
if you get to buy a dip when rebalancing , well that is a good thing . but rebalancing or dollar cost averaging have their own performance hurting issues as well.
about the best situation is you suddenly get some cash from something and at that moment buy in to a dip with money you never had prior sitting around .
for one thing to buy the dips means you have to have un-invested cash sitting around . as peter lynch said more money has been lost or given up in anticipation of or in preparation for a down turn then has been lost in any downturn .
since markets are up 2/3's of the time and down only about 1/3 you rarely make enough in a dip unless you are a great timer then you gave up by not being invested with that money on the sideline .
the biggest problem is no one knows what is low .we all thought low in 2008 was when the markets fell 2000 points . well who knew we had 4000 more to go .
so many were either stopped out when limits were hit or they just plain panicked and bailed or realized they did not get a deal at all and threw in the towel.
so what has made the most money ?
buy high and sell higher , the trend is your friend .
in a dip odds are after you buy next stop is lower as objects in motion stay in motion . when going up , next stop is usually higher and you have to be pretty unlucky to lose money and be that person at the end of the line before a reversal .
so the point is i don't usually keep uninvested cash waiting for that proverbial dip as rarely do i make back what i gave up keeping that cash .
if you get to buy a dip when rebalancing , well that is a good thing . but rebalancing or dollar cost averaging have their own performance hurting issues as well.
about the best situation is you suddenly get some cash from something and at that moment buy in to a dip with money you never had prior sitting around .