Reduce
Your Investment Risks By Using Dollar Cost Averaging
Technique
Step1
- The road to financial freedom is to
have great health so that you are in good shape
to learn.
Step
2 - An open mindset to start learning
and practicing what you have learned.
Step
3 - Investing your time in your
financial & health education so that you
are in control of your life to create wealth to
enjoy a better life.
Step
4 - Enjoy the wealth that you have
created because you have been taking care of
your health.
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Need - Sean Toh
Concept Of Dollar Cost
Averaging
Another widely followed technique to make
stock investing a strategical task is dollar cost
averaging. Dollar cost averaging means making periodic
investments of the same amount of money in the same
stock regardless whether the price is declining or
ascending. The same dollar amount of investment will
be made in the same security on the 15th of every
month, or on the first day of every quarter or
whatever interval is selected. The investment must be
devoid of any consideration of the current stock
price, if the investor wishes to maintain a program of
dollar cost averaging. The idea behind this investing
strategy is that by investing the same amount each
month over a period of years, you buy more shares at
market lows and fewer shares at market highs. As time
goes by, the cost of stock shares you add to your
portfolio balance out to an average price. This cuts
down on the risk that you invest a lump sum at market
highs and helps you to continue buying at market lows
when others are selling and missing out on potential
future gains.
This type of investing strategy has several key
advantages. First, it prevents procrastination. Some
investors have a hard time getting started. They may
know they should be investing, but they never manage
to get into the stock market. Once started,
dollar-cost averaging can be an easy way to commit to
regular investing. Second, dollar-cost averaging helps
you participate in the stock market regardless of
current conditions. Thirdly, this investing strategy
minimizes remorse associated with getting in or out of
the market at the wrong time. Even the most
experienced investor probably feels a tinge of regret
when an investment proves to be ill timed. Worse, such
regret may cause you to disrupt your investing
strategy in an attempt to make up for your setback.
Dollar-cost averaging can minimize this regret because
you make multiple previously scheduled investments,
with none of them being particularly large.
Dollar cost averaging does not assure a profit and
does not protect against loss in declining stock
markets. This type of plan involves continuous
investment in securities regardless of fluctuating
price levels, so investors should consider their
financial ability to continue their purchases through
periods of both high and low price levels.
Historically, dollar-cost averaging over the long term
has been a wise, low-cost and potentially profitable
way to invest.
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