Thread: Investing 102
View Single Post
  #3370  
Old 12-05-2013, 08:51 AM
bdahlg68's Avatar
bdahlg68 bdahlg68 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Northville, MI
Posts: 474
Thanks: 3
Thanked 11 Times in 10 Posts
Default

Absolutely. Never be afraid to buy a stock that has gone up unless it would skew the % of your portfolio in that stock. Call it what you want - dollar cost averaging, averaging in, nibbling - whatever makes you happy - but it is one of the fundamentals of being a successful investor!

Quote:
Originally Posted by GregWeld View Post
As long as we're on "year end" thoughts…. Here's a "notion" that always kills me when I hear it.


A guy is looking over his portfolio -- he has new money to put to work. He AVOIDS buying the stocks that have gone UP…. Why? Because they've gone up!


Really??

So you're unhappy because they did what you want them to do?????? Explain that to me please…


I had said that I bought 500 shares of Twitter (TWTR) and that I would possibly increase this stake to 1000 total shares. I just bought the other 500 this morning. Why now? BECAUSE THEY'VE DONE WHAT I WANTED THEM TO DO --- THEY'VE GONE UP.


If you go back and look at the long term (3 plus years) charts -- You WANT them higher on the right than the left side! So if you use that logic -- then there's no way you're not going to pay more for the new shares than you did the old. (Averaging DOWN is a different story! Not to be confused with just building a position).


If you owned 100 at $40 a share -- and you pay $45 for the 100 new shares -- you still own shares at below the current market trade price. You now own 200 shares at $42.50 and the stock is trading at $45 What's wrong with that??
__________________
Brian

1968 Pontiac Firebird
1989 Ford Mustang
Reply With Quote