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This 'Easy' Decision Could Sink Your PortfolioBy
Monday, January 29, 2018
When you buy a stock, how do you decide how many shares you'll buy?
Most people don't have a clue how to do this. But it's something you have to get right – it's crucial to your investing performance...
So seriously, what's your process for determining how much of a stock you'll buy?
Do you say something like this?
Or are you more like this?
If either of these is your "process," then how did you decide on $5,000 for the position? What makes $5,000 the "right" amount?
You have a reason, I'm sure... For example, maybe you have $100,000, and with 20 stocks in your portfolio, you divide it up equally.
That's a fine answer... But why do you divide it up equally?
Is that the best way?
Have you ever sat down and thought about this?
For example, should you have the same $5,000 in gold stocks as you do in a boring bond fund?
If you did this in the second half of 2016, your portfolio would have been crushed.
Investing $5,000 in each position sounds like a plan... But it's actually just "winging it." And the results can be disastrous.
So what is "right"?
This is THE important question... We've touched on it before. But it's too big a question to fully answer here in a short DailyWealth essay.
However, I talked in-depth about one of the best answers we've found during a special webinar last week...
I met up with my colleagues Porter Stansberry and Dave Eifrig – and we discussed a unique service we've set up to help you master this process. It's called Stansberry Portfolio Solutions. And it's designed to help you start investing like a pro... because you'll know the exact number of shares you should buy for every recommendation.
You'll maximize your opportunity. You'll allocate appropriately. You'll follow a stop-loss discipline. You'll finally learn how to "get there" with your investments.
If you missed our discussion last week, click here to watch the video replay now.
Good investing,
Steve
Further Reading:
In this essay, Ben Morris starts with sound position-sizing rules... and ends with a simple set of guidelines for profiting from this bull market. If you're getting worried about stocks, his strategy could keep you safely in the game... Learn more here.
After a surprise market dip last summer, Porter shared the perfect example of how to cushion your losses in a downturn. "This allocation allowed us to reduce our downside by almost 30%," he explained... Read more here.
Market NotesNEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK
General Dynamics (GD)... "offense" contractor
Raytheon (RTN)... "offense" contractor
Freeport-McMoRan (FCX)... diversified mining
Royal Dutch Shell (RDS-A)... oil and gas
ExxonMobil (XOM)... oil and gas
O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY)... auto parts
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCAU)... cars and trucks
Deere (DE)... lawnmowers and farming equipment
Pool Corp (POOL)... pool supplies
Lowe's (LOW)... one-stop shop for home repairs
3M (MMM)... everyday goods in your house
Dollar General (DG)... everyday goods at lower prices
Costco Wholesale (COST)... membership-only bulk retailer
Best Buy (BBY)... big-screen TVs, laptops, tablets
Activision Blizzard (ATVI)... video games
GoDaddy (GDDY)... Internet domain names
Cisco (CSCO)... "World Dominator" of the Internet
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)... "World Dominator" of health care
Novo Nordisk (NVO)... leading drugmaker to treat diabetes
Abbott Laboratories (ABT)... "one of the world's greatest tailwinds"
Becton Dickinson (BDX)... "one of the world's greatest tailwinds"
Baxter (BAX)... "one of the world's greatest tailwinds"
Anthem (ANTM)... health insurance
Morgan Stanley (MS)... America's "financial backbone"
Bank of America (BAC)... America's "financial backbone"
Citigroup (C)... America's "financial backbone"
Mastercard (MA)... credit cards
Domino's Pizza (DPZ)... pizza
Dunkin' Brands (DNKN)... coffee and donuts
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