Chris34
Well-known member
- Messages
- 1,807
- Location
- Stockport, Cheshire
Yeah rolls Royce was always a bargain. The problem is if you suddenly decided to start investing and you saw it at 50p then it seems like a no brainer, but there will be those who have been investing longer who bought at say £4 and saw it drop to £2 and say it's a bargain... only to then see it then drop to £1.50 and say this is ridiculous how cheap it is... and to then keep seeing the price drop.I have had similar gains to you with my shares but not the losses you've had, my biggest was 1k around 2 years ago but that was early on in my trading and it taught me a valuable lesson,
all of mine bar one is down which is Google aka Alphabet, I toyed with the idea of buying into Big Bear AI and wished I had a few weeks ago as they more than doubled but have crashed again but if I'd sold before the crash I'd have made a few thousand pounds 4 weeks.
My top trump has been Rolls Royce I started buying them when they were £0.50 a share and someone said to they didn’t think they'd be a good buy the closing price on Friday was £8.02![]()
That's the hardest part, knowing when to bail out because the share prices don't reflect how well the business actually is, it's just a reflection of other peoples opinion, which is often a reflection on what they think other peoples opinion will be, not what the actual business is doing
What's worked for me is to have a plan though and stick to your plan. Mine might not work out but I've got to stick with it because it worked last year and dealing with losses is a part of it, so it's trying to take the emotion out of it and sticking to the plan and using your head. It's really hard though. I've cut my losses only to see the shares fully recover but if they didn't recover then I could have been wiped out.
I spread the risk the best I can and sell when they hit my target or if there is a change in the business that warrants a re-evaluation of the share price.
Another thing I've been working on is buying and selling regular on the same shares to achieve a better return than just holding onto them long term. Say for example Barclays, well they're currently £2.98p and have hit £3.17p in the last month. Now I bought some at £3.10p with a target of selling at £3.40p so roughly a 12% return. However the price dropped to something like £2.92, so I bought some more with a target of £3.10p, within about a week they hit that target and I made around 7% return. Since then it went to £3.17p and then dropped back to the £2.90's I think two or three times and has gone back to £3.10 about 3 times. So if I had done the same thing buying at say £2.95 and selling at £3.10 then I would have made a total of 20% return (3 x 7%) returns. Meanwhile my shares bought at £3.10 and waiting for the target of £3.40 are just sat there doing nothing, no returns, no losses just nothing and even if they do hit target the return will only be 12% which is much less than the 20% plus I would have made on buying the dips and selling on the way up.
Basically I'd pick a share that I believe is going up, but rarely does a share price go straight up, it's up and down but in an upward trend. When Trump farts (excuse the pun), I'd buy that share (on the dip) and then expect the share to recover 7% and sell it and wait for the next time Trump farts to buy again. Over time I'd expect to do better than just buying and holding out for a bigger return.
Lot's of different strategies you can use and I do enjoy it but it's stressful when they're in losing positions
