Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not use a stop loss to protect my investments. We had a flash crash a few years ago that triggered many stop losses on individual stocks, not sure about the ETFs, and those positions recovered their losses within minutes. I would just be diversified to manage my risk in investments.
A similar event could happen again. And the powers that be never fully explained the reasons for that event.
Who are the powers that be and what explanation might they give for the flash crash?
Anonymous wrote:OP. Thanks for all the advice folks! I'm predominantly a buy-and-hold investor that has some money on the sidelines. My question was about committing this new money. Is it better to stay on the sidelines (in bonds or MM) or invest in the market with a stop loss (8-10%)?
Best case scenario, no market crash and I participate in the market gain. Worse case, there's a crash (real or fake) and I get stopped out.. No biggie. I'm back to my money market. Am I right with this approach or am I missing something?
Anonymous wrote:OP. Thanks for all the advice folks! I'm predominantly a buy-and-hold investor that has some money on the sidelines. My question was about committing this new money. Is it better to stay on the sidelines (in bonds or MM) or invest in the market with a stop loss (8-10%)?
Best case scenario, no market crash and I participate in the market gain. Worse case, there's a crash (real or fake) and I get stopped out.. No biggie. I'm back to my money market. Am I right with this approach or am I missing something?
Anonymous wrote:I don't have the energy to play games with stocks. I buy to hold. The only guy I know who actively messed around ended up losing his family's money, divorced, with a stint in a psychiatric institution. Not good.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have the energy to play games with stocks. I buy to hold. The only guy I know who actively messed around ended up losing his family's money, divorced, with a stint in a psychiatric institution. Not good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not use a stop loss to protect my investments. We had a flash crash a few years ago that triggered many stop losses on individual stocks, not sure about the ETFs, and those positions recovered their losses within minutes. I would just be diversified to manage my risk in investments.
A similar event could happen again. And the powers that be never fully explained the reasons for that event.
Who are the powers that be and what explanation might they give for the flash crash?All that info is at your fingertips. My main point is that event or something similar could easily happen again. Or maybe some event happens in the Bond market, creating a rapid rise in rates, thus forcing the stock market down quickly. Triggering stop losses. Market rises on an escalator and corrects on an elevator.
Anonymous wrote:I would not use a stop loss to protect my investments. We had a flash crash a few years ago that triggered many stop losses on individual stocks, not sure about the ETFs, and those positions recovered their losses within minutes. I would just be diversified to manage my risk in investments.
A similar event could happen again. And the powers that be never fully explained the reasons for that event.