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Position Sizing

The Investment U E-Letter: # 340
Tuesday, May 25, 2004

Position Sizing: Why Size Matters to All Investing Greats
By Brian Hunt, Vice-President, Investment U

I made four times my money in JDS UniphaseBut I made one mistake with JDS Uniphase: I didn’t put enough money into the trade, and picked up a valuable lesson on position sizing. It was early 2000, near the top of the bubble, and I was getting used to making 100%-plus returns.

Reading a popular investment newsletter, I fell for the hype surrounding another tech stock, LSI Logic but I wouldn’t make the same “mistake” I did with JDS Uniphase.

“If I’m going to make four times my money again, I’m doing it with over half my portfolio,” I thought.

But something awful happened on the way to the bank: Instead of soaring in value and making me rich, LSI Logic tanked. I was out $23,000 - more than I would even spend on a car!

The LSI Logic loss was brutal, and it wasn’t the only stock I lost money on. So I decided to make a big change. I couldn’t lose that kind of money again.

I left the markets for over a year to study to find out what professional investors do that I didn’t do.

Here’s what I learned

Position Sizing is What the Pros Do that Novices Don’t

I made all kinds of mistakes starting out, like trying to make a quick buck and buying the most popular stocks but the biggest mistake was ignoring position sizing as a powerful investing concept.

It’s amazing how few investors even consider how much money to place into one investment. That’s all position sizing is the part of your investing strategy that tells you “how much” to place into any one investment.

Position sizing provides the answers to these questions:

  • Should you place 10% of your money into one stock?
  • How about 50% of your money?

What All Great Traders Have in Common

After taking several big losses in my account, I decided to learn from the greats. I read a book called Market Wizards, and discovered the world’s most successful investors used position sizing by putting only a tiny portion of their money (generally 1-2%) at risk on one idea.

I then learned the specifics of position sizing from the book, Trade Your Way To Financial Freedom, by Dr. Van K. Tharp. After studying thousands of successful traders, Dr. Tharp learned that every trader making millions in the market is fanatical about using position sizing to control risk.

Here’s How You Can Use Position Sizing in Your Own Portfolio

Let’s say you have $100,000 to invest and you’re using the 1% risk model to guide your investments. If you’re using a 25% stop loss, you could buy $4,000 worth of stock and risk $1,000 ($1,000 is 1% of $100,000).

In the example above, you placed 4% of your portfolio into the stock and set a 25% stop-risking just $1,000 of your money (since $1,000 is 25% of $4,000).

Some investors use even tighter stops, in the 10%-15% range.

If you’re using the 1% risk model with a 10% stop loss, you could buy $10,000 worth of stock. You have the same dollar amount at risk ($1,000) as the first example - but you’re allowing the stock less room to go down before you sell.

Now I use smart position sizing-and I never worry about taking big losses like I did with LSI Logic. Take a look at your portfolio today and make sure you know “how much” you have at risk. That way you’ll be prepared regardless of what happens with any one position.

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Today’s IU Cribsheet

  • Above I mention a couple of books that really helped me become a better investor. Another that I’d recommend is Safe Strategies for Financial Freedom, co-authored by Dr. Van Tharp, IU President Dr. Steve Sjuggerud and master trader D.R. Barton. Just click here to get your own copy.


Good investing,


Brian Hunt


P.S. Take a look below if you’re interested in additional issues on the topic of position sizing:

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