21-06-2015, 09:35 PM
(21-06-2015, 09:29 PM)GFG Wrote:(21-06-2015, 04:22 PM)Bubbachuck Wrote:(21-06-2015, 04:13 PM)GFG Wrote:Hmm. Not sure how it's emotional though. Just trying to rebalance my portfolio and focus on my winners. Anyway, thanks for that.(21-06-2015, 10:18 AM)Bubbachuck Wrote: Keep your winners and sell your losers:
Hi buddies, I'm planning to sell my loser and want to buy more of my best winner to make it my core holding. However, I'm hesitant because it will dilute my unrealized gain (%) because I'm nearing my first 2 bagger experience. I am confident that this will still do better in the long run. Just like to ask your opinion, does the unrealized gain (%) matter to you just to have "multi-bagger" in your portfolio?
Now that's really an emotional way to look at things... not a good thing when it comes to investing.
$1 earned from a "2 bagger" = $1 earned from a "1 bagger" = $1 earned from picking up a coin on the streets
It is still a $1.
Unrealized gain or even previously realised gains shouldn't have any impact on your portfolio decisions.
Hi
It's emotional cos you're hesitant to buy what you perceive to be a winner, just to avoid diluting your winner's return.
A decision whether to invest more into this winner should be based on current factors. What's the value currently, and what's the price U can get it at now? How does your unrealized returns in this company affect its future prospects, or whether your current investment will be a good one? It doesn't at all.
Your decision should not be affected by your previous investment, whether it's a multi bagger Win or even a multi bagger loss.
Admittedly, this is hard to understand and even harder to practice, I myself m not immune to being emotional.
For eg. Many studies have shown that ppl are more willing to risk losing "profits" from successful earlier investments, rather than lose the same quantum if there's no earlier profits
Reason being ppl perceive these profits as something additional.
Which is why I gave the analogy that a dollar earned in any way is = $1.
Yes, portfolio rebalancing is part of investing n managing capital. That's not the point I m making. What I m saying is simply that if "avoiding diluting the multi bagger return" is a factor in deciding whether you should invest more, that's definitely emotional.
"keep your winners and sell your losers"
Another point id like to share is that this phrase, which is over used, is also widely misunderstood
Yes, keep your winners as long as after your assessment, they r still likely to out perform any other investment opportunities you have in front of you.
Similarly, sell your losers if nothing material has changed and they are likely to continue underperforming.
But simply keeping winners n selling losers without any evaluation of their CURRENT price-value ratio just leads to buying high and selling low.