A crash course on the meaning of life in the context of FIRE
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We almost had a personal finance festival, but the May elections forced
the event to be postponed. In such events of late, financial institutions
have ...
11 hours ago
Hear hear!
ReplyDeleteBeen there; done it.
I guess most of us have to go through this baptism of fire to emerge wiser (provided we survive of course).
Only then can we tell the difference between averaging down and scaling in.
It's not just semantics. It's the true test between what we think we know and what we really know.
That to me it's the greatest risk in trading/investing.
If the company is still fundamentally sound and profittable and the decline in price is due to macro economy outlook, i don't see anything wrong with averaging down.
ReplyDeleteLet's assume the company's fundamentals are fantastic. Now if you pyramid down 1,2,3,4,5; is it really the same as pyramid up 5,4,3,2,1. Presuming everything being equal. For one (one of the most important) you are always in the money when you pyramid up. This means the market is saying you are right about the fundamentals of this company.
ReplyDeleteThe main problem with both methods is who can really knows the falling knife has struck the bottom. When should i start to pyramid up? In practice, nothing is perfect.
Actually, the most important is still the fundamentals of the company.