I am convinced that investing in oil is a winner for the medium term. I am ( I think) sufficiently convinced that I can avoid worrying about / reacting to short term price changes.
I have purchased $10k and $20k blocks of various oil etfs (DBO, OIL, USL, etc). So far so good. I also got the bright idea to play around with UCO (a double long), but have finally grasped the problems with the multiple and inverse ETFs for any thing but day trading so have sworn those off.
I got another bright idea, to set up trailing stops for the regular ETFs. I have been stopped out several times, and then bought right back in immediately. This worked out pretty well once, and not so well another time.
Some other background:
-I am absolutely not qualified to be, nor particularly interested in being, a trader.
-The funds I am 'playing with' are in a self-directed IRA, so there is no meaningful distinction between short-term and long-term gains (as far as I understand).
So my question - given my thesis and my commitment to it, and the other background info, is there any reason to use stops, and if so, what kind.
Thanks in advance for any feedback.
I have purchased $10k and $20k blocks of various oil etfs (DBO, OIL, USL, etc). So far so good. I also got the bright idea to play around with UCO (a double long), but have finally grasped the problems with the multiple and inverse ETFs for any thing but day trading so have sworn those off.
I got another bright idea, to set up trailing stops for the regular ETFs. I have been stopped out several times, and then bought right back in immediately. This worked out pretty well once, and not so well another time.
Some other background:
-I am absolutely not qualified to be, nor particularly interested in being, a trader.
-The funds I am 'playing with' are in a self-directed IRA, so there is no meaningful distinction between short-term and long-term gains (as far as I understand).
So my question - given my thesis and my commitment to it, and the other background info, is there any reason to use stops, and if so, what kind.
Thanks in advance for any feedback.
Comment