while going thru
"reminiscences of a stock operator"
i came across a line
"i don't buy any stock too cheap too easily".
i was surprised!
i tried but couldn't digest it.
how can someone say no to buying something too cheap and too easily?
the more i tried to understand the reason behind this
the more it eluded me!
had the statement come from a modern-day business-channel expert
i would have moved on long ago.
but since it came from
"boy plunger"
after traversing some 100 years
i was desperate to get behind the veil of the statement.
i kept wrestling with the question
and finally cracked it.
--
why do we buy a stock?
so that it goes up
and we finally sell it at a higher price
and make profit.
--
what livermore wanted to say was
that till the falling stock actually stopped falling
consolidated
and started to climb again
there was little chance that it wouldn't fall more!
and hence, no point buying it.
and when it finally showed strength
and started to move up
it would be a worth buying.
but by then
it wouldn't be at its cheapest price
besides being less comforting a buy
than when at its lowest!
--------
to quote livermore further
"stocks are never too high to buy or too low to sell."
and
"it is surprising
how many experienced traders there are
who look incredulous
when i tell them
that when i buy stocks for a rise
i like to pay top prices
and when i sell i must sell low or
not at all."
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