TXBullion wrote:I just got to thinking, I never did significantly before. Whats the point of DCA, understandably so you average and such get the highs and lows. I was thinking about real estate. DCA is kind of stupid. You have a theoretical valuation of an asset, if your valuation meets the price you pull the trigger, if it does not, you do not pull the trigger. You wouldn't want to dollar cost average something just to do it right? I would like to get some input from people as Im pretty open to changing my mind on this topic as to what makes sense. Please let me know why DCA instead of only buy when you think something is a BUY?
barrytrot wrote:TXBullion wrote:I just got to thinking, I never did significantly before. Whats the point of DCA, understandably so you average and such get the highs and lows. I was thinking about real estate. DCA is kind of stupid. You have a theoretical valuation of an asset, if your valuation meets the price you pull the trigger, if it does not, you do not pull the trigger. You wouldn't want to dollar cost average something just to do it right? I would like to get some input from people as Im pretty open to changing my mind on this topic as to what makes sense. Please let me know why DCA instead of only buy when you think something is a BUY?
Actually you are defining proper DCA.
Only DCA when the item is "a Buy". When it is not, you do not. That simple.
For most investments the item will be a buy at several points, so you buy periodically to avoid missing out.
If it rises above "buy level" then you don't buy.
And, presumably once it reaches "sell level" you would liquidate at a similar inverse-DCA rate.
Jonflyfish wrote:Excellent record keeping ought to be a careful consideration as well. Especially when the time to liquidate arrives and FIFO applies.
Cheers!
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