GOOD
@Shyon
Buying the dip? Catching falling knife? Have you try it before? You end up earning a lot or losing everything? Haha. Well, buy the dip is a term used to describe an investment strategy of buying a fundamentally sound asset when its price falls, commonly due to outside factors. Investors then“buy the dip”in anticipation of prices recovering for that asset. As buying the dip increases an investor's position, the returns can be higher if prices increase, but the risk of a potential loss can also be greater if prices fall. Personally, I practice 2 different strategies when. Buying the dip: 1. Firstly is purely fundamental and belief. If you trust the company is doing well and the share price is short term affected due to black swan issue, then that's an entry point during the dip. 2. Otherwise, I will judge using the technical indicatior especially RSI 14. If the value is below 30, it signifies an oversold situation which may start to attract the entry of plenty technical buyers. If the value falls below 10, then it's really a great deal. However, this only works for the good stocks that suddenly dip but not on those lousy stocks that keep dropping non stop over the time. Last but not least, remember, if buying the dip was consistently effective, everyone would be doing it. The fact that stock prices and markets go down, often for extensive periods, proves it won't work for every investor every time. At best, buying the dip can be a way to pick an entry point for an investment you already wanted to own. @Meme_Tiger @MillionaireTiger @TigerPicks @TigerWire @TigerStars @CaptainTiger @Tiger_comments @TigerGPT @Fenger1188 @GoodLife99 @Universe宇宙 @b1uesky @icycrystal @rL @koolgal
Buying the dip? Catching falling knife? Have you try it before? You end up earning a lot or losing everything? Haha. Well, buy the dip is a term used to describe an investment strategy of buying a fundamentally sound asset when its price falls, commonly due to outside factors. Investors then“buy the dip”in anticipation of prices recovering for that asset. As buying the dip increases an investor's position, the returns can be higher if prices increase, but the risk of a potential loss can also be greater if prices fall. Personally, I practice 2 different strategies when. Buying the dip: 1. Firstly is purely fundamental and belief. If you trust the company is doing well and the share price is short term affected due to black swan issue, then that's an entry point during the dip. 2. Otherwise, I will judge using the technical indicatior especially RSI 14. If the value is below 30, it signifies an oversold situation which may start to attract the entry of plenty technical buyers. If the value falls below 10, then it's really a great deal. However, this only works for the good stocks that suddenly dip but not on those lousy stocks that keep dropping non stop over the time. Last but not least, remember, if buying the dip was consistently effective, everyone would be doing it. The fact that stock prices and markets go down, often for extensive periods, proves it won't work for every investor every time. At best, buying the dip can be a way to pick an entry point for an investment you already wanted to own. @Meme_Tiger @MillionaireTiger @TigerPicks @TigerWire @TigerStars @CaptainTiger @Tiger_comments @TigerGPT @Fenger1188 @GoodLife99 @Universe宇宙 @b1uesky @icycrystal @rL @koolgal

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