So you refuse to market time?My strategy hasn't changed. I continue to invest every month and will continue to do so till my cash reserve for investing is empty. I live below my means and reinvest anything leftover. I don't have a lot of things since I find they are an anchor to freedom.
It isn't that at all. DRIPping is simply another tactic that helps investors with the psychology of investing. And that is the number one stumbling block to success. Ourselves. Yes, lump sum is mathematically better. However, if DRIPping makes someone feel safer and gets them in (to stay) in the market then it is worth far more than any mathematical "optimization"So you refuse to market time?
Sounds like you are dripping but that is market timing and is a term created by mutual funds and banks to get your to buy their funds
I purchase a company's shares every month. When a significant drop happens I'll pick up extra that month if warranted. I don't like to do large purchases as I'd rather have the highs and lows. Not getting the mathematical optimization as stated by @Liam011 but it's much easier on the nerves. I don't buy mutual funds only Canadian stocks. Better tax advantage in my cash account plus I use the cash for living expenses.So you refuse to market time?
Sounds like you are dripping but that is market timing and is a term created by mutual funds and banks to get your to buy their funds
Investing in individual stocks is a fools gameI just invested 25% of my portfolio in unh. In a market where everything is overvalued, unh seems to be a great bargain. It has issues, but nothing it can’t overcome.