This article informs how to effectively manage risk by minimizing losses and transforming these losses into gains over time when investments sharply decline. For those of you who have been following my stock market investing activities you know that I have been actively buying and selling shares of an oil company called Seadrill (SDRL) over the past couple of months. At the recent bottom, a couple of weeks ago, this stock had lost about 43% since I first started buying it back in late November, but I was able to transform this loss into a substantial gain. Patience, discipline, and the use of effective techniques are the keys to success when stocks that you initially buy significantly decline. Effective techniques that I used in this particular example were price averaging and the periodic selling of technical “bounces” by taking advantage of the natural volatility of stocks. These techniques can work well, because stocks generally do not go down in a straight line. They tend to rise and fall over time.
Here’s a sample scenario which demonstrates how to effectively use these techniques. Imagine that you buy 200 shares of SDRL at a notional price of $10.00 ($2,000 invested total). A week later the stock falls to $9.00 which is a 10% loss. At that point you decide to invest another $2,000 and buy 222 shares of SDRL resulting in an average price per share of $9.48 ($4,000 total invested/422 total shares = $9.48 per share). This technique demonstrates the concept of price averaging.
Upon buying the second set of shares (the 222 shares of SDRL at $9.00 per share in this case) you can immediately place a sell order for these shares for whatever you consider to be a substantial gain for these particular shares. Let’s say, for illustration purposes, that you decide on a 10% gain or a price of $9.90. You would then monitor the stock and if it approaches the 10% gain for those shares then you might either manually execute the sell order prior to reaching the $9.90 price or wait until it is automatically triggered at the $9.90 price. If it sells at 9.90 then you will have received $2,198 for the $2,000 invested in these shares. If the stock drops again to, say, $9.00 you might again buy the shares at this price. In this case, you might invest another $2,000 (and retain the remaining $198 as your profit) buying 222 shares which once again results in an average price per share of $9.48. And you can continue this process throughout the ups and downs of stock prices by taking advantage of the natural volatile nature of stocks such that even those that decline significantly over time can result in you experiencing minimal losses or perhaps even realizing some substantial gains as I was able to do with the SDRL stock over the past couple of months. Often, this strategy will result in a series of buys on significant declines and a series of sells on significant rallies. However, by operating in the fashion described above you will only be selling each set of shares whenever they experience significant gains which will, at worst, minimize your losses or, at best, generate significant gains in time.
One of the keys to successful investing involves being prepared in case things do not turn out the way you might initially expect such that you can capitalize either way that things might go. The above strategy allowed me transform an initial 43% loss into a substantial gain. A substantial gain is often likely if you are patient, because, in the investment world, frequently lagging stocks become leading stocks, over time, and so long as the risk-reward indicators remain favorable in nature it makes sense to continue buying and/or holding shares of these stocks.
Selling a portion of your gains all along the way allows you to use the cash you raise to buy additional shares should the stocks you are holding reverse and begin to decline. Because in the world of investing nothing is ever certain. This is why developing and refining strategies “up front” is so critical to success. Doing this can transform you from being an emotional investor into a disciplined one who realizes steady and consistent success over time. I have solid risk management strategies that I have developed for various investment types and investing environments, for the clients that I work with, so feel free to contact me if you’d like to find out more.
This article informs how to make the most of investment situations through pre-planning and effective techniques and strategies; even when the stocks you are holding significantly decline. Part of being a solid investor is recognizing opportunities when you see them and promptly capitalizing on them when the risk-reward of securities you are tracking become highly favorable (as a buyer) or highly unfavorable (as a potential seller or short seller) in nature. By periodically rotating out of investments which become less favorable and into investment opportunities which become more favorable in nature you will realize consistent investment success over time. You won’t make winning investments all of the time, but the point is to use strategies and techniques which allow you to make winning investments for much of the time. I can help in these regards.
Please contact me if you need any assistance with any of your financial planning, management, and/or investing needs as this is one of the areas that I actively perform life coaching and training in. Also feel free to click on “Financial Planning, Management, and Investing Related Posts” to the sidebar on the right or below (depending upon which device you are using to view this article) for helpful tips on how to become a solid investor. These articles provide helpful tips on how to become a solid investor so read through some of these if you think they might be helpful to you. In addition, in case some of you would like to follow along, here is where I regularly post about my stock market activities. So feel free to visit this page if you would like to follow what I’m doing in the stock market at any given time.
For those that did not know, I generally perform life coaching and training services in two primary areas: 1) Personal and Professional Improvement, Development, and Growth, and 2) Financial Planning, Management, and Investing. As such, I generally alternate the articles that I write via my blogs between these two topic areas. This particular article is associated with the second area that I life coach in. So if you do not have much interest in financial planning, management, and investing, rest assured that one of the next articles that I write will be in the area that you might have greater interest in; the personal and professional improvement, development, and growth area. You can also follow me on Twitter if you like at: Joseph M Brennan Jr @ BrighterDaysLC
Joseph M. Brennan Jr.
CEO/Life Coach – Brighter Days Life Coaching
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