Were you taught to be a "buy and hold" trader? Exactly what does
that mean? In the classes I give, I always ask: "Buy and hold until
when? Death?" That can work very well for your heirs, but how about
for you? There is no question that buying and holding for the long term
can be an excellent strategy. Just take a look at the Dow 30
Industrials over the last thirty years or so. The charts show a nice
uptrend over that period and if you bought the Dow thirty years ago,
you'd be holding a nice gain. Suppose, however, that you bought in May
2001 and that you had an emergency and needed the money in October,
2002. Or suppose you decided to start investing for retirement fairly
late (as many do if they do it at all). Let's say in the middle of 1999,
you saw the market had been rocketing so you bought some mutual funds
for your retirement day in the middle of 2002. What happened? Between
the middle of 1999 and the lows in October 2002, the Dow Industrials
dropped about 3000 points, the Nasdaq fell around 3700 points from early
2000 until October 2002 (and hasn't yet reached the 2000 levels), and
the SP-500 dropped more than 600 points in that same time frame. Even
now, years later, you probably would not have recovered if you began as
a buy and hold investor in 1999 or early 2000. Of course, if you had
years to go, maybe you would wind up successfully. History would
suggest an ultimate gain.
When you look at the kind of investor you are or are going to be,
you should consider who you are. Are you someone who can afford to buy
and hold for 30 years or so? Are you in a position to invest in that
fashion? Or are you someone who needs most of their earned money each
month to pay the mortgage, car payments, taxes, insurance, groceries,
credit cards, etc. and after all that have little if anything to lock
away for the long term. That is certainly the more common picture. If
you fall into the latter category, what sorts of things can you do to
invest in stocks and options? First, you must recognize that your early
trades will have to be small. In my earlier article on money
management, I suggested that it is wise to make trades using equal
percentages of your *risk* money. 3% to 5% of risk money is often a
percentage that is suggested per trade, buy if you only have a couple of
thousand of risk money, that means your trades would be limited to $60
or $100. That may not be enough when you factor in commissions. You
could opt for equal dollar amount trades in the beginning. Perhaps you
could initially make $400 trades if you were starting with only $2000 in
risk money, but that is still 20% of your money. My suggestion would be
to paper trade while you saved enough to increase your risk money.
Paper trading means making trades with pretend money; practice trading
and keep records of what you are doing. Learn more about trading as you
increase your risk capital. In other words, increase both your
knowledge and your cash before you trade with real cash. You can learn
by watching what professional traders do in subscription services, by
reading, by attending classes, by watching trading DVD's, by talking to
successful traders. As you do those things, you also practice trading
until you are confident in your own abilities to trade in a disciplined
fashion, to cut losses, to manage your trading money, and to follow your
personal business plan. Only then should you consider risking your own
hard earned money.
Once you believe you have the knowledge to trade and to appreciate
and manage risk, you can consider what kind of trader you will be. Of
course, you may choose to simply select fundamentally sound companies
and buy the stock for the long term. That strategy can be great, but
you must recognize that it can be awfully painful to sit through long
and sometimes very sharp down turns. You need to understand that when a
position drops 50% it needs to then increase 100% just to return to
even. Instead, you may decide to choose to employ a more "trader-like"
approach. If you are bullish, for example, you only stay in positions
until they break down through a trend or break support and you don't
stay in throughout complete retracements. You get out when the stock
stops being bullish and you know you can get back in after it has ended
its' bearish leg. You can also play a stock in both directions.
Instead of just trying to make money when a stock goes up, and then
either ride it down or get out for the down move, you can learn
strategies with both stocks and options to make money both when the
stock goes up and when the stock goes down.
Trading and investing in the stock and options markets can be
extremely rewarding, but it also involves very serious risk. That is
why I often wonder why so many people literally spend no time learning
how to invest or how to trade. Taking the time to increase your
knowledge can increase your profits, reduce your losses and, ultimately,
if you are successful, lead to meaningful positive changes in the
quality of your life. Successful investing can give you a better
retirement, help pay for college, enable you to have more free time, let
you contribute more to charities, and have numerous other wonderful
consequences. Take the time, make the effort to increase your investing
knowledge. You'll probably enjoy learning and the rewards could change
your life. It's always your money that you are risking so don't risk it
without knowing what you're doing.
Good Trading!
Bill Kraft
SUCCESS TRADING GROUP -- by the Success Trading Group Team
Our Success Trading service delivers quality trading ideas for the elite investor that has the financial wherewithal and market nimbleness to profit on small moves in a stock's price. Become a member and you will be provided with email and/or pager alerts intended to provide you with the opportunity to make many, many profitable trades.
Details Here.
OPTION TRADER -- by Bill Kraft
Our Option Trading Service is for conservative traders that understand leverage pricinciples. We focus on powerful option trading strategies that place volatility and momentum in your favor. And we pride ourselves on minimizing our losses. We always know our downside potential in a trade.
Details Here.
TREND TRADER -- by Bill Kraft
Trend trading as we try to practice it is a form of momentum trading. We prefer to try to capture profit out of the middle of the trend rather than try to catch reversal at bottoms and tops.
Details Here.
$10 TRADER -- by Bill Kraft
We really enjoy trading stocks that are $10 and under. Often they provide the chance to enjoy high percentage gains and, of course, at worst, the risk is limited to what we paid for the stock.
Details Here.
COVERED CALL SERVICE -- by the Covered Call Team
Details Here.