Proposition Joe said:
Bonfire1996 said:
Proposition Joe said:
McInnis 03 said:
Philip J Fry said:
Can someone explain net free?
Is that simply 100% return + fees/taxes?
buy 100 shares at $50.
Sell 50 shares at $100.
Own 50 shares, net free.
It's equivalent to taking off all the risk.
But you're essentially paying for the reduction in risk with future profits. It's a good strategy for many people, but it can also put people into this mindset that just because they are "at least break-even" on an investment that they have done well -- except "at least break-even" shouldn't be most people's goal.
the whole point is to turn a VERY short term trade into a 100% profit, long term option, no matter the risk.
Many people here have net free, ROKU shares with a cost basis in the 30s. They became net free in a matter of weeks if not days. It isn't a technical term, but a mindset that you blasted the shlt out of some short term risk and now you have long term, fugg you money potential.
I understand it, but it's careful for people to also understand "net free" isn't actually free. You're paying for it, it's just being paid for in future potential profits. If your expected value for why you entered the position in the first place still hasn't been reached, then you're essentially doubting your initial prediction. It's a hedge.
That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it's counter-productive if that wasn't part of your initial plan.
PropJoe:
I think you're discounting the likely purpose of the original "plan". In most cases, doubling your money
IS the plan. Therefore, if it happens sooner than expected, it's not hedging, but accepting
MORE risk by keeping some of your original stake in play.
In words I know you and I both understand, it's like my approach to playing craps - I put $300 in a game, and once I have $600 in the trough, I put half in my pocket (nice friendly black chips
). Then, once I make that much again, I slip a few more black chips in my pocket. It's bankroll management, nothing more or less.
Now, as opposed to craps, where if you play long enough, you lose, the stock market is win-biased, where if you play long enough, it melts upward (if you're a long equity buyer). That's why it's a better bet than gambling (even if you are a sharp, like yourself).