Scale In & Buy Stocks as they Move Up - NOT Down! [Lessons from the Greats]



Scale In & Buy Stocks as they Move Up - NOT Down! [Lessons from the Greats] ★ SUMMARY ★ Coming Soon Posted at: http://tradersfly.com/2015/10/scale-in-buy-stocks-as-they-move-up-not-down ★ SHARE THIS VIDEO ★ https://youtu.be/w9PgO-j5q5k ★ SUBSCRIBE TO MY YOUTUBE: ★ http://bit.ly/addtradersfly ★ ABOUT TRADERSFLY ★ TradersFly is a place where I enjoy sharing my knowledge and experience about the stock market, trading, and investing. Stock trading can be a brutal industry especially if you are new. Watch my free educational training videos to avoid making large mistakes and to just continue to get better. Stock trading and investing is a long journey - it doesn't happen overnight. If you are interested to share some insight or contribute to the community we'd love to have you subscribe and join us! STOCK TRADING COURSES: -- http://tradersfly.com/courses/ STOCK TRADING BOOKS: -- http://tradersfly.com/books/ WEBSITES: -- http://rise2learn.com -- http://tradersfly.com -- http://backstageincome.com -- http://sashaevdakov.com SOCIAL MEDIA: -- http://twitter.com/tradersfly -- http://facebook.com/tradersfly MY YOUTUBE CHANNELS: -- TradersFly: http://bit.ly/tradersfly -- BackstageIncome: http://bit.ly/backstageincome

Comments

  1. You're awesome! Love all your videos!
  2. How to predict an upward or downward trend ? When the fundamentals are fine, why not just use a value approach and buy if the stock is undervalued, if one aims to invest for the long term ?
  3. Your a really smart guy Sasha
  4. I think a minor dip in the stock and you should buy the stock.....

    and if it is going still down then book a loss and get out...

    Maintain strict stop losses...

    I have really applied your views on to buy the stock when it is going up...

    And it has helped...

    But at times the stock goes down five to ten percent although it had been rising at the moment you buy the stock and then it falls before you have reached a respectable profitable levels...

    I think you should also make a video on when to sell the stock...

    i.e to when to sell the stock if brought at higher prices or the idea to maintain stop losses......
  5. What if you've been scaling up and the price falls out from under you? Your reasoning is based on anecdotal evidence not logic. Who falls for this?
  6. Nice website. You probably have growth stock in your mind while creating this. On the flip side, we have Ben Graham's value investing. Do you have a video on diversification!
  7. It totally depends on the individual stock or situation and sometimes even the sector... for instance, if you'd added to a "losing" position on oil E&P's as oil prices tanked, you'll be very nicely positioned to make some serious $$$ as the Brent/WTI price recovers... and there are plenty of examples of people that had HUGE steel balls that bought into stocks during the crash of '08/'09 that made some massive profits as prices recovered...
  8. depends what you are trading you would be losing more money from commissions trading penny stocks etc.
  9. wouldnt the average share price rise higher and higher by doing so ? and what if it starts going down ?
  10. I'd wait for it to hit the floor then put in 10% or less. But if it is enron or any company comiting fraud and scandel then get out and kill all positions! profit or loss.
  11. Do u teach how to day trade?...
  12. What about a conservative approach such as buying and reselling iteratively based on the continuous speculation, but rebuying by some factor (maybe double it)? For example, if I see the stock increasing and so I buy a share for $10 and then it becomes worth $20, sell it and by the next time it increases buy the new share (even though it will cost more and will lose a little it might be worth avoiding the risk of it completely dropping). When would this be a rational method of accounting for the risk of lost?
  13. I like it when you show chart trends and explain...your the man sasha!
  14. Sasha, thanks for this video. Can you make a video that focuses on fundamental analysis. Talking about Income statement, balance sheet, and important ratios like P/E , EPS, PEG and how the companies ratios compare to the industry and competitors. I like the idea of buying a stock at a discount, if its valued way lower to its competitors and industry.
  15. The AIG Stocks example just contradicts your point because if you had bought stocks from AGI when it was going up then you would have ended up with a negative profit later on
  16. Thanks for your insight Sasha. This particularly was a very helpful video as I always scale down. I have recently started watching your videos & must say you are doing a great job helping people not to lose money in the dirty stock market. I have myself lost a lot of money in stock market due to lack of knowledge. Keep doing the good work - good to see people like you are still alive. Thanks once again.
  17. good explanation. I'll follow that strategy.. but I guess it would also be better if i have a target price? then hold then sell if it reached my final sell off target? anyway, kudos thanks!
  18. what do you think about day trading instead of long term investing
  19. hi sasha , how much did you make all in all as profit in the stock market ?
  20. Totally flawed logic.

    If you'd have scaled into AIG when it was on the way up, you'd have lost pretty much the same as if you'd have scaled-in on the way down.

    It's called dollar cost averaging for a reason - it's averaging your cost basis.

    Nothing more complicated than that.

    You buy some at the low, and others at the high.

    Dollar cost averaging only makes profit if the stock continues to rise, but it doesn't matter if you scaled in on the way up, or in on the way down.

    Your cost basis is your average cost and that's exactly the same whether you get in on the way up, or whether you get in on the way down.

    Your profit is the end price minus your cost basis... regardless of how you "scaled in".

    If a stock dies, both methods lose..

    If a stock takes off again, both methods win.

    The "greats" aren't too great for offering this little gem - "scale in and buy stocks as they move up in price" (first slide) means buy stocks that are only going to increase in value.

    Duh.


Additional Information:

Visibility: 18237

Duration: 11m 55s

Rating: 247