Topic: How To Invest

What is Pat’s commentary for the week of January 22, 2019

Article Excerpt

“Averaging down” and “averaging in” sound similar, and their meaning is similar as well. Both are investment tactics that let you rely, in part or whole, on price changes rather than facts to make investment decisions. A wide gap separates the two, however, and mixing them up can cost you money. Averaging down is something of a face-saving tactic, and most people use it only on occasion. Averaging in can be part of a disciplined, proven approach to successful investing. Averaging down is the well-known trader’s tactic of buying more shares of a stock you own as the price falls. The idea is that this will cut your average cost per share. That way, you make more money (more per share, at least) when the stock turns around and goes up. One problem with averaging down is you are betting you were right when you bought the stock the first time. You assume your $20 stock pick is an even better buy…