I'll keep my peace on Tesla for now, other than to say I found myself in a casino when I thought I was in the stock market. It's been a tough few months, but it could have been worse. I kept my exposure to what I could reasonably afford. That meant closing portions of my short position as the price rose. That pained me, but it limited my losses. As you can see from below, I haven't gone bust!
The main purpose of this post is correct a few mis-statements by others:
At a general level, in my opinion, his (Colm's) writings are disproportionately reward focused. That has always been my concern and in that I remain steadfast.
On the contrary, unlike most who write about their investments, I have always been very open about my losses. In addition to Tesla, I have also written about losses on Ryanair, WPP, Samsonite, AMP, and Carclo, where I lost over 75% of my investment. Carclo was the subject of my first diary entry back in September 2015. If you don't believe me, you can find past diary entries on my website
here.
Colm writes about stocks and he's losing money hand over fist
Again, completely untrue. I have just looked at my ARF statement for 2019. It's my largest account by far. The administrator (execution only) tells me that the return for the year was 46.5%. For my overall portfolio, including non-ARF investments, spread bet accounts (including Tesla) and cash on deposit, the total return for 2019 was 27.1%.
In the current month (January 2020), up to close of business last night, I earned a positive return on my total portfolio, despite the losses on Tesla in the month.
On a longer term basis, it was easy to calculate the average return on my AMRF for the 8 years 10 months between when I started it in December 2010 and when I folded it into the ARF in 2019 (I had to fold it because of increases in the state pension). There were no cash flows (in or out) in the period, so the return was simply the closing value compared with the amount invested back in 2010. The average return over the entire 8 years 10 months was 13.7% a year.
So much for losing money hand over fist. It also answers
@elacsaplau 's point that my writings are disproportionately reward focused. That's because my returns are disproportionately rewards focused. The good returns are because I take a disciplined approach to investment. Implied in my approach is a belief that other investors will act rationally. I've discovered recently however that sometimes they act quite irrationally. That knocks me off balance. It has been a painful discovery, but it's been a learning experience, which I hope to use to my advantage in future.