-the problem with investors determining their own risk tolerance is that it's generally not very accurate; near the top of bull markets, almost every investor is a badass in her own eyes, with "high risk tolerance"; near interim bottoms, a lot of investors suddenly become "low risk investors"; in its own way, this serves as a decent sentiment indicator for the individual investor;Centeron631 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 pm Yodean "to accumulate intelligently" - I do have a general now plan for myself to limit my invests to Primary Greens only from here in. Do ur words include for now for me a low risk investor of a senior senior age, to buy to average down on some of my riskier past investments well in the red to attempt to try to save their asses?
-i can't tell you what to do exactly, as every suggestion will contain some element of risk; with that said, some of the following may be helpful:
1) investors tend to hold too many positions in too many different assets; this drains cognitive energy, etc.; i've read some research that says the optimum number of assets to hold is around 20 or so; less, and you lose the potential benefits of intelligent diversification, and more, you start to enter "di-worsification" territory;
1a) one path to take is to sell all your stocks/options etc. in a certain asset class - let's say tech. - take the proceeds, and consolidate into one ETF in that sector - let's say qqq or tqqq - and sell covered calls on that position on up days; and you can do the same with stocks in other sectors; this would also give you the benefits of tax-loss harvesting;
1b) as the neonatal bull grows, you can start selling bits of the etf in question, and take the proceeds to deploy in certain stocks/leaps in that sector that you think will outperform the etf;
2) don't try "save the asses" of crappy investments - some investments are stillborn ... performing endless CPR on them won't help - send them to the wonderful life-affirming Canadian MAID (Medical Assistance In Dying) program! take the losses like a non-transitioning man that you are, and deploy the proceeds as per #1a-b above;
3) DCA'ing is a good idea during certain times (imo, now) - so if you think we're transitioning into a bull market as i do, you can deploy set amounts of capital on dips into the etfs in question (per above); slowly, carefully, but firmly ...
Fortune rewards the bold.