T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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371.1 | Small loss = easy taxes | STAR::BOUCHARD | The enemy is wise | Wed Feb 03 1993 10:45 | 7 |
| 35 shares of IBM at a loss of ($115 - $50) = $65/share = $2275.
This amount is low enough that you can simply reduce your taxable
income by $2275 in the year you sell.
If you don't think IBM will increase in value I'd sell now, take the
loss and the $600+ tax savings in 1993, and look for a better
investment.
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371.2 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Wed Feb 03 1993 10:59 | 26 |
| Forget that you paid ~$115. You have alread lost the difference
between $115 and the current price. Their is no "strategy for
(gracefully) taking a loss" that will change that.
Look at IBM *TODAY*. Is it a good investment at today's price? If
not then sell it "ASAP in hopes of finding a new investment that
will grow".
If you DO consider it a good investment at today's price, then the
matter is a bit more complex. You have a "paper" loss and it MAY
be to your advantage to capture that loss this year for tax
purposes. So if you want to stay in IBM you might decied to sell,
wait 31days (?) to avoid having a "wash sale" and then re-buy IBM.
Naturally, if IBM goes back to $115, at some future point you'll
have a taxable gain equal to your loss this year. Points to
consider:
Do you have taxable gains this year against which this loss
can be applied?
Do you believe that the time value of the money plus or minus
the difference in tax rates between today and "some future
point" make it advantageous to trade off a loss today agains a
gain in the future? (If tax rates increas you could have to
pay more tax on you're future gain that you save on the loss
this year.)
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371.3 | IBM's breakup could benefit stockholders | SCHOOL::DESAI | | Wed Feb 03 1993 12:13 | 13 |
| According to my friend at IBM, if the actual break up of the company
takes place into few independent companies, stockholders will benefit.
Assuming that the bad news is already out, I wouldn't rush into selling
now (especially since the stock has already taken major beating).
Anyway, I have heard that some analysts expect it to go down as low as
$40 a share when they think it is a great buy.
This reminds me of an ex DECie who sold in December at $33 - was hoping
to buy back after the wash period and now doesn't think its a
good buy after the recent run up. He may never recoup his massive
losses but he may have sold it a bit too early. Oh, I am talking about
the DEC stocks he had for $100+.
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371.4 | I use -10%, no questions asked. | BUOVAX::DUNCAN | Free and Flying | Thu Feb 04 1993 15:28 | 11 |
|
re: .0
>What's your strategy for (gracefully) taking a loss on a stock?
I never take a loss gracefully. I take it, but not gracefully. ;-)
Kidding aside, I use a stop loss of 10%. If any investment I hold
dips that much, (as sleazeball Gordon Gecko would say) I "dump it".
- Phil
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371.5 | | SOLVIT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Mon Feb 08 1993 09:12 | 18 |
| The only reason to sell at a loss is if you believe you can do better
elsewhere with the worth of the stock at TODAY's price. NEVER look at
what you paid, ALWAYS look forward.
You can reduce the loss by taking advantage of the tax deduction of
losses (up to 3K per year and rollover the rest to next year). So,
when you do your analysis, factor in the "gain due to reduced taaxes"
as part of how well that money would do elsewhere. Clearly, due to tax
considerations, the best time to do that analysis and arrive at a "sell
for a loss" conclusion is at the end of the year; make the transaction
on Dec 31, if you can.
I NEVER gracefully sell for a loss!!! The only mitigating factor is
that I can stick 1/3 of it on Uncle Sam.
As always, FWIW
Dave
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371.6 | Where do you get that -10% benchmark? | GNPIKE::JOHNSON | Matt Johnson | Mon Feb 08 1993 09:17 | 10 |
| I'm sure a lot of people use a rule like -10% or -20% to decide
whether to dump an investment. I wonder whether anyone's done any
analysis to see whether "dumping" is a good strategy. That is: do
investments that lose 10% generally (in statistical terms) stay losers,
or do they tend to bounce back later? And of the losers, how many
are heading for near-100% losses in value? Of course, I don't expect
that people will be able to present the hundreds of pages of figures
it would take to support their strategies, but it would be nice to hear
what examples they might use to explain this bit of conventional
wisdom.
|
371.7 | Hind Sight | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Feb 08 1993 13:37 | 11 |
| There's an old axiom of investing that states "dump your non-performers
and ride the winners". The strategy is you can lose 10 or 20% on some
stocks but can double or triple on others and you'll be a net gainer
over the long term. NEVER FALL IN LOVE WITH ANY ONE STOCK!!! If it's
not doing well dump it. I'd rather get interest than ride a stock down.
Successful strategies show you need goals to succeed. Never buy a stock
unless you know when to sell and when to buy. Anyone who's held a stock
long enough to lose half its value didn't have any pre-set limits and
should never have bought the stock. I may be stating the obvious but
money and emotions have a way of clouding good sense.
Dan D
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371.8 | Have to look at the individual instruments | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh "Drink DECAF: Commit Sacrilege" | Mon Feb 08 1993 14:05 | 25 |
| Based on my personal experience, I can argue both ways. But, finally,
it is the nature of the underlying instrument that will determine
whether you should dump it ir not. One needs more information about
the company's products, competition, growth, and the overall market
situation.
I still hold IBM even though it has lost nearly 50% for me. In
retrospect, this was a mistake. In fact, I'm happy that I was
considering to buy more at about $70 to average down, but did not.
OTOH, I hold stocks of Ross Systems that makes Financial
Accounting software for Digital and HP machines. They are a nicely
growing company, with good products and good earnings growth. Last
year, the stock fell heavily on less than expected growth in earnings
(their earnings still grew by 117%!). I lost more than 60% of
my holdings on paper. I bought some more at that time only to
see it fall to 25% of its value. Since then it has rebounded very
nicely, and in fact, now I'm up nearly 13% on it!! So, in this case
averaging down seems to have paid off, at least on paper.
[BTW, when I received Ross' annual report, I was surprised to see
that there are only about 300 shareholders for this company. Should
that worry me?]
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371.9 | one view of it | BUOVAX::DUNCAN | Free and Flying | Mon Feb 08 1993 21:28 | 34 |
|
re: .6
>That is: do investments that lose 10% generally (in statistical terms)
>stay losers, or do they tend to bounce back later? And of the losers,
>how many are heading for near-100% losses in value?
For me, I do it with the full expectation that my abort sale _will_
likely recover to new highs (and many do - man, is that frustrating!).
Why? Because a short string of "near-100% losses" is only needed to
knock me out as an investor (I often margin trade), and no stock can
become such a loser without first becoming a 10% loser. Why 10%?
Fairly arbitrary, but it keeps my 2.5:1 (sometimes 2:1) ratio for %
price gains to losses intact. I've found that once I aim for more
than 25% on a stock, it takes a much longer time in the trade (longer
than I like to be in one).
Bottom line is that a 90% loser has to pass thru 10%, 15%, etc. before
it can do it to you (crashes excluded). The solution is to never let it
get that far, but to do so one must give up some real good performers.
:^(
Fwiw, I mentioned in another topic that I had a bad year last year. If
I had clung to some of the issues that really tanked (all of which had
stellar earnings and relative strengths at purchase time), it would
have approached a disaster. Rather have bad than disaster, as I'm
still able to approach the plate for another swing rather than rot in
the bleachers.
Just my take on it.
- Phil
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371.10 | Another Ross believer | PMASON::ROYAL | | Tue Feb 09 1993 10:17 | 19 |
|
RE .8
OTOH, I hold stocks of Ross Systems that makes Financial
Accounting software for Digital and HP machines. They are a nicely
growing company, with good products and good earnings growth. Last
year, the stock fell heavily on less than expected growth in earnings
(their earnings still grew by 117%!). I lost more than 60% of
my holdings on paper. I bought some more at that time only to
see it fall to 25% of its value. Since then it has rebounded very
nicely, and in fact, now I'm up nearly 13% on it!! So, in this case
averaging down seems to have paid off, at least on paper.
[BTW, when I received Ross' annual report, I was surprised to see
that there are only about 300 shareholders for this company. Should
that worry me?]
>>> FYI, I own Ross too and am holding onto it (so there's only 298 others
>>> out there that own it :-} ). I'm hoping that with a
>>> DEC turn-around and their HP ports it ought to rebound nicely.
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371.11 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Feb 09 1993 14:48 | 4 |
| re "only 300 shareholders":
That's probably 300 shareholders of record. If your stock is in the street
name, your broker is the shareholder of record.
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371.12 | You don't make money buying stocks | CSOA1::PROIE | | Sat Feb 13 1993 14:16 | 24 |
| Re: Selling the losers...
In a book a read several years ago, "The New Money Masters", by an
author I forget, there was a discussion of this topic near the
conclusion. The book is about several money managers that have (had?)
good investment track records. The author stated that they use
varying, sometimes contradictory, methods - but had one thing in
common:
They all sell losers.
One of the recommendations that I specifically recall was:
Sell any stock that decreases in value by more than 7 percent of the
market in general. (i.e. if the general market went down by 10%, don't
sell your stock until it decreases around 17%).
And remember one of my favorites:
Nobody EVER made money from buying stock...
Only by SELLING.
Wayne
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