facebookPeople often talk about emotions causing investors to sell low. Do you feel tempted to sell once you've earned from an investment? - Seedly

Anonymous

25 May 2020

General Investing

People often talk about emotions causing investors to sell low. Do you feel tempted to sell once you've earned from an investment?

Will you always benefit from "buy and hold"? What if prices go down?

Discussion (6)

What are your thoughts?

Learn how to style your text

Pang Zhe Liang

25 May 2020

Fee-Based Financial Advisory Manager at Financial Alliance Pte Ltd (IFA Firm)

The best way to do this is to always have a well-defined investment objective before you start to invest. Through this process, it keeps your emotions in check whenever the temptation arise.

For a single stock, you may not always benefit from "buy and hold". What goes down can go lower. Moreover in reality, dollar cost averaging stocks does not work all the time.

More Details:

Dollar Cost Averaging Singapore: Does it really Work?

Therefore, it is best to spend quality time to define your investment objective. This keeps us steady when waves rise.

I share quality content on estate planning and financial planning here.

Lin Yun Heng

25 May 2020

Senior Analyst at Delphi

Prices go down- This tells me you have yet to develop an investor's mindset. Prices will always go up and it will always go down, that is just how stocks work and in the short run no one will ever know where prices are heading. With a investor's mindset, you should see stocks as businesses and businesses generally do better over time (SOLID FUNDAMENTALS) By identifying the right stocks (businesses), you are bound to gain if you hold it in the long run. Do note: You should only INVEST in stocks if you plan to hold them for at least 3-5 years as gains will not be realised before that. If you hold stocks for a few months or even a few weeks, that is not investing, that is being SPECULATIVE and that is not what investing is. Another difference is trading, and beginners should never attempt to do so as you need to have a good grasp of technical analysis as well as identifying macroeconomic trends and constantly staying up to date. Just my two cents.

Will you always benefit from "buy and hold"? What if prices go down? - Hello Mr Diversification!...

Write your thoughts