Common sense doesn’t always lead to profitable investing decisions. In fact, making an investment based on what feels good or appears to be common sense can often lead to losses. #-ad_banner-# This is because the stock market tends to attract the highest number of investors at exactly the wrong time. Professional investors understand this and generally buy a stock when the public is scared or simply not interested. One of the hardest things for new investors to grasp is the basic rule of buying weakness and selling strength. Common sense and the feel-good method of investing is to buy… Read More
Common sense doesn’t always lead to profitable investing decisions. In fact, making an investment based on what feels good or appears to be common sense can often lead to losses. #-ad_banner-# This is because the stock market tends to attract the highest number of investors at exactly the wrong time. Professional investors understand this and generally buy a stock when the public is scared or simply not interested. One of the hardest things for new investors to grasp is the basic rule of buying weakness and selling strength. Common sense and the feel-good method of investing is to buy a stock when it is going up. Professional investors buy stocks on pullbacks and sell into strength — the exact opposite of what the majority does. I’m not suggesting that buying strength or when a stock is climbing never works. Under certain circumstances, breakout trading or strength buying makes sense. However, most of the time, waiting for a pullback in an overall uptrend creates the optimal entry level. The reason for this fact is big-money investors generally only buy bargains. They never want to pay top dollar for any asset. The professionals understand the difference between value and price. … Read More