Personally, I don’t sell high-quality stocks when prices fall. I only rebalance my portfolio if a stock was more of a gamble than a long-term investment.
In my opinion, companies will still be using SAP in 10 years—probably just in a different way. If you have that kind of time horizon, then don’t sell.
If you generally can’t handle price fluctuations in individual stocks, then sell them all and go all-in on an All World ETF.
Best regards
In my opinion, companies will still be using SAP in 10 years—probably just in a different way. If you have that kind of time horizon, then don’t sell.
If you generally can’t handle price fluctuations in individual stocks, then sell them all and go all-in on an All World ETF.
Best regards
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•@Marvin22b Thank you for your feedback. I’m also a big believer in SAP in principle and work with it every day. I’m familiar with price fluctuations in individual stocks. I was just wondering how long the sideways movement would last and whether I might miss out on returns during that time—hence the thought experiment.
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