Brian’s Financial Musings

Okay, you have your investment portfolio allocated among stocks, bonds, real estate, etc and you have at least 20 investments with no more than 4 – 5% invested in a particular item.  When do you sell a stock, bond, etc.  You need a strategy and the best one I have found is trailing stop losses.

Say you have a stock you bought for $10 a share.  You decide to keep a 20% stop loss on this stock.  if the stock ends the day down 20% from when you bought it, or $8, you sell it the next day.  But this is a trailing stop loss, so if the stock goes up to $15 a share, now your stop loss is 20% of the high, so if your stock ends the day at $12, you sell the next day.  Waiting until after the close cuts out the intraday fluctuations that occur in the market.

So you sold your stock for $12, giving you a profit of $2.  You lost some profit on the deal, but gave your stock enough room to continrue to grow.  Say the stock went down to $13, then the next day, jumped to $20; now your stop is $16  You allowed your stock to grow while protecting your downside.The saying I keep hearing from successful investors is “cut your losses and let your winners run.”  This strategy lets you do that.

If you follow the allocation and selling stategies I outlined, You are only risking around 1% of your portfolio on any one idea.  You are managing risk while still giving yourself a lot of upside in your investments.

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