Question:

When do you buy an investment?

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When do you buy an investment? Let's say you just put some money into your IRA/Roth IRA for the year. Do you just do a market order to buy or a limit order for good price or what? I'm not exactly new to investing but sometimes I'm afraid to wait for a good price because I don't want to miss my chance and get an even worse price.

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  1. I buy in thirds. I buy now then a little later and later still. That way I can convince myself I am never wrong. LOLOL.

    If it goes up then I made money on my recent purchase. If it goes down I am averaging down and I was smart not buying it all at once and getting it cheaper still.

    Being an "investor" with a little longer term horizon, I don't buy unless I am convinced it will be higher next year.

    That way the short term ups and downs and the exact buy price mean less and I don't worry too much about it.

    I watch the overall market and the state of the economy for my investment choices. The bigger picture serves me better than trying to pick a bottom or top on a single stock.

    And as somebody said:

    "I will let others shoot for the last 10% at the top or the last 10% at the bottom. I am happy with the 80% of the profit in the middle."


  2. You are buying stocks within an IRA?  The only way to do that is with a self-directed brokerage IRA.

  3. I always use a limit order to get the price that I want since I do not watch the stock market minute to minute.  Also, I have recently learned about stop orders that perform upon reaching a certain floor price.

  4. I would seek a professional advisor with 10+ years of market experience to help you.

    You can buy or sell anytime in the IRA/Roth.

    Depending on your time horizon, investment goals, and risk tolerance, when and what to buy is a deeper question.

    Generally I use limit orders when I sell a stock. If you have instant execution for large cap stocks then market orders are prob ok, except in fast markets.  When buying or selling options, I always use limit orders.

    If you are looking 10+ years down the line, it doesn't matter if you paid a couple bucks too much if you have a quality company.

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