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Main › Investment & Finance › Stocks & Equities
 

Life is a Hard Teacher: Failing to Have an Exit Strategy

 
Author: Bill White and Rasheed Ali
 

I can tell you a specific thing I learned early on when I started buying stocks. I had $550 in my account... not much I know... so I bought 1 stock, 100 shares at $1.90 a share. Just 3 hours later it dipped to $1.80 a share... so I bought another 100 shares. The next day I bought another company at $2.15 a share, 50 shares. Later that day I bought a OTC stock for .04 a share/100 shares.

By the time I did these few transactions I had 400 shares of stock, but guess what? I had $5.76 in trading cash left. So what happened was my first stock tanked down to $1.60 a share and I couldn't get out because I didn't have enough cash to put a stop limit on it nor outright sell at a small loss. My second stock went up to $2.75 a share and I couldn't sell for a profit because I couldn't afford the trading commission.

Moral of the story as specifically related to the stock market:

1) Don't buy more of a stock going down... you're throwing money into what is likely a sinking ship.

2) Never buy so much stock that you can't afford trade commisssions.

I took that knowledge and became a slightly better stock trader with it.

Moral of the story as an overall lesson about financial planning:

1) Always know what your costs are going to be.

2) Always leave the exit available, open and know when you want to get out.

3) Follow your strategy!

 
 
 

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