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This has some good and bad features as a system.
Firstly, it is difficult to apply to shares that are highly
volatile. If the shares often move by 5% or more in a week and a
stop-loss set too closely to the current price, it might force you
to sell when you would rather not. In those circumstances, a limit
of 20% or more may be more appropriate.
On the plus side, if you really do need to
protect your capital at all costs, selling should the price move
against you is a vital way of protecting yourself. Sure, you may
guarantee to lose 10%, but if the price keeps on falling, you may
have saved a lot of money indeed. Shares often rise or fall in a
rather predictable way - when things are good and a company is
growing and generating good profits, prices rise and rise. If
however, things are bleak and losses are being made, the fall can
last for months or years and massive amounts can be wiped from a
company's value.
It therefore makes sense to try and benefit from
this trend, this is why many people use a 'trailing stop-loss'. This
is a more active track of share prices and performance and is
designed to let you (and I'm quoting a very famous investment
saying) 'run your profits and cut your losses'.
To use a trailing stop-loss, set a number of
points or percentage below your current share price. This will be
your minimum - the automatic trigger to sell if the price is
breached. However, should the share price rise, your stop-loss is
moved upwards in the same ratio as the share price. Thus, your
trigger will still be (for example) 15% below the current price, but
that will be higher than it once was.
The further up a price goes, the farther the
trigger is reset. This has the effect of locking in a majority of
your profits. Should the price go into reverse, you sell at your new
higher level, but if the price keeps rising and rising, you get to
profit from those gains.
Now obviously, if I have just explained the above
in a few paragraphs, it is far to simple for fund managers and
investment bankers to be following. They have complex computer
programmes that calculate how a price has moved in relation to an
index, a sector and the rest of a portfolio. Decisions are far more
complex. This of course is for pro's that manage dozens of shares
and not the likes of us that manage a few at a time. But for
managing a few at a time, the above is a simple and effective method
to lose much less and profit more in the market.
If you want to really see it in action, the best
thing I can suggest is to find a few sheets of graph paper, draw a
graph and start following a share price each day. Add the stop-loss
at, say, 10% below the current price and keep plotting the graph
over a few weeks. Every time the shares hit a new high, increase
that stop-loss. If the share price stays the same or falls just plot
an extra day without altering the stop-loss. Pretty soon, it will
all become very clear and remarkably simple to operate.
Stuart Langridge is a financial planning
consultant to expatriates in the Benelux region. To subscribe to his
free monthly email newsletter and receive a free 70 page ebook about
financial planning, please click on the following link:
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