When is it OK to violate your cost basis to buy more shares of a company?

3 mins read
29 views

Here’s our Club Mailbag email [email protected] — so you send your questions directly to Jim Cramer and his team of analysts. We can’t offer personal investing advice. We will only consider more general questions about the investment process or stocks in the portfolio or related industries.

This week’s question: The cardinal rule of discipline is to not violate cost basis and show patience to buy more high-quality stocks on pullback. How do you evaluate a flying stock which might not come back to levels of cost basis to add more? Recent examples include Nvidia (NVDA), Eli Lilly (LLY) and Tesla (TSLA). — Thanks, Ravi

Read the full article here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

68-year-old engineer spent 50 years at one company and ‘always’ told his bosses to ‘leave me alone’: ‘Let me learn the job’

Next Story

Enrolling In Or Changing Your Health Coverage

Latest from News