I have a tendency to buy leveraged ETFs for stocks that I already have a certain position in...
TSLL, NVDU, SOXL, I have been increasing my buys every time they drop until yesterday, and they turned into profits nicely. Now it's all about holding on.
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リラックマ
:
It's great when it rises sharply and suddenly crashes, but it's the most disheartening when it slowly decreases. I want excitement and thrill, so I hope for big moves with 3x leverage (of course, hoping for upward direction).
KAZU SUN
:
One of the ways to use the Moo Moo Securities website is to arrange by ascending rate, right? I register my favorite stocks and look at them in descending order, as I'm at the bottom, meaning I'm looking at the ones with the highest decline rate. For example, the other day, TSLL, SOXL, MARA, etc., were nicely declining, so I significantly increased my purchases. The next day, they surged, right? Of course, some may be removed, and I have also experienced further declines, but generally, things that have declined will rise. Here, it's good to take short-term profits and make some pocket money, or even keep it for the medium to long term. In the end, it's all about where to sell, right? While it's important to buy and hold for emergencies and the future like S&P 500 and Orkan in a systematic investment NISA account, leverage products need to be strategized in short-term, short to medium-term, and medium to long-term, or else it will end up being just 'a picture of rice cakes' and you'll end up with only cash left, right?
リラックマ : It's great when it rises sharply and suddenly crashes, but it's the most disheartening when it slowly decreases. I want excitement and thrill, so I hope for big moves with 3x leverage (of course, hoping for upward direction).
ミスター高値づかみ OP リラックマ : Certainly. Especially SOXL has been sideways, so I expect it to erupt this year!
KAZU SUN : One of the ways to use the Moo Moo Securities website is to arrange by ascending rate, right?
I register my favorite stocks and look at them in descending order, as I'm at the bottom, meaning I'm looking at the ones with the highest decline rate. For example, the other day, TSLL, SOXL, MARA, etc., were nicely declining, so I significantly increased my purchases. The next day, they surged, right?
Of course, some may be removed, and I have also experienced further declines, but generally, things that have declined will rise. Here, it's good to take short-term profits and make some pocket money, or even keep it for the medium to long term.
In the end, it's all about where to sell, right?
While it's important to buy and hold for emergencies and the future like S&P 500 and Orkan in a systematic investment NISA account, leverage products need to be strategized in short-term, short to medium-term, and medium to long-term, or else it will end up being just 'a picture of rice cakes' and you'll end up with only cash left, right?