To what end?...can you help us to compare like with like and disclose how your share investments have done over the last 5 years?
This is ridiculous. Total return is all that matters. Do you want me to split it into its component parts just to please you? I've better things to do with my life.disclose how your share investments have done over the last 5 years?
This is ridiculous. Total return is all that matters. Do you want me to split it into its component parts just to please you? I've better things to do with my life.
Are you sure you're not looking for the total return on the shares in my portfolio which have factories in Indonesia making widgets for midgets? This is getting more ridiculous by the minute.
To be fair, Colm has been at pains to emphasise that he doesn't advocate that anybody follows his approach.
This whole thread has gone ridiculous. People are openly discussing taking long and short positions on one share which I didn't think we were allowed to discuss.
What does it matter what Colm does? It is interesting to read and I enjoy his posts but anyone who takes his advice or anyone else's advice about following a particular investment strategy from this site needs their head examined....
@Fella You should have done your long trade with me, since I increased my short position at the open today. It would have saved us both a few bob in brokerage costs and bid-offer spreads!
In answer to @Andrew365 , my plan at the moment is to ignore price movements - in either direction - between now and when the full year results are published, probably at the end of January. In the meantime, I won't get too excited or depressed by moves in either direction. Massive short-term volatility is par for the course with Tesla.
my plan at the moment is to ignore price movements - in either direction - between now and when the full year results are published, probably at the end of January. In the meantime, I won't get too excited or depressed by moves in either direction. Massive short-term volatility is par for the course with Tesla.
Hi @Fella. Yes indeed, you're doing very well at the moment! Well done!
I still stand by what I wrote in #140 above:
I've seen nothing since the Q3 results were announced to cause me to change my assessment of the stock. Yes, Musk won the 'pedo' court case, but that has nothing to do with the company's business prospects. Therefore, since my view on the company's prospects haven't changed, I've retained my short position. In fact, I increased it again last week!
As you surmise, the price rise is proving costly, and each 5% rise costs more than the last 5%. That's a sobering thought.
Of course, I can't let my belief that Tesla is ridiculously overvalued cause me to lose my shirt. I assure you that I'm aware of that risk. It helps that the long positions in my portfolio are rising in value at the same time, and the increase in the value of my long positions is significantly more than the loss I'm suffering on my short positions. (I have one other short position, which I plan to write about in my next update. I had hoped to publish it this week but it will probably be delayed until the new year for domestic reasons. I'm also losing on that short position, but it's a different type of loss to the Tesla one, for reasons that will become clear when I write the update.)
It's important to qualify my statement above that the gains on my long positions are greater than the losses on my short positions. That's true, but the gains are mostly unrealised, while the losses have immediate cash consequences, both in terms of there being less cash available in my spread bet account and also an increase in margin requirements. It's important to have contingency plans to deal with the resulting cash flow challenges.
The time may come when I will have to throw in the towel, if either (a) the value of my short position in Tesla comes to represent an unacceptably large proportion of my overall risk exposure, or (b) I see hard evidence that the company really is worth much more than I think it's worth. In relation to (a), I haven't yet reached my risk limit with Tesla, although it's getting closer. In relation to (b), I haven't seen any hard evidence that it's worth anything close to what the market values it at.
It will be humiliating if I have to concede defeat, but I've bitten the bullet on losing positions before and lived to tell the tale. This time will be no different, though a bit more high profile!
PS: I should have asked if you (or any other contributors) have seen anything since the Q3 results were announced that would cause the company's market value to increase.
When I bought Tesla less than a month ago it was 332 its 376 as I type ,
Hi @Fella. I never cease to be amazed at people who claim to be long-term investors but who nevertheless worry about (or celebrate) short-term moves in the market values of stocks in their portfolios. In fairness, that criticism doesn't apply to you. As I recall, you see yourself as a trader rather than an investor, and I'd say you're a good one too.
As I think you know by now, that's not my style. I try to take a long-term (five years plus) perspective for all my investments. There is no doubt that my timing with Tesla hasn't been ideal - and that's an understatement - but I'm not particularly worried, as I believe the fundamentals haven't changed, so my assessment of the company hasn't changed either. In overall terms, the cost of the Tesla short hasn't been a major drag on the return on my portfolio. I checked yesterday (in response to another correspondent) and the overall value of the portfolio had risen more than 8% in the period from 31 October to close of business yesterday. And that's after allowing for the impact of the Tesla short.
As I said much earlier in this thread, my first real decision point is likely to be when the financial results for 2019 are announced. I think they're due in early February. I don't envisage having any problem keeping my short position open until then. I doubt if I'll be adding any more to it in the meantime though!
We are all influenced by our backgrounds. Your background as a gambler influences your thinking. My background (over 50 years of it!) in risk management influences mine.there was a time I found a huge value bet but had to stop myself after taking more and more , I stopped at a certain % of my bankroll even though I was getting 3/1 on a 1/2 shot it lost but meh . I overstaked that bet ,
With the short the loss is unlimited
Brendan, would you really have admitted defeat? If, at that point, you still thought that Bitcoin would eventually be worth zero (or practically zero), surely the right course of action would be to part close your position, so that you still had (somewhat lower) exposure to the (in your view higher) probability of the price falling from that elevated level? That's what I envisage doing if Tesla gets to the point where it represents too high a proportion of my total risk exposure.If it had hit $24,400 I would have admitted defeat.
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