Sentences with phrase «if stocks fall»

If stocks fall, bonds are defensive and may insulate your portfolio from losses.
If stocks fall from 50 % to 45 %, do the opposite.
If your stocks fall 29 %, to $ 14,200, your $ 10,000 loan would equal more than 70 % of the account's total value — and, depending on the brokerage firm's rules, you could receive a margin call.
For example: If stocks fall drastically, it is likely that bonds will hold steady in value or even rise.
If stocks fall too low, GM could jeopardize future market share of its most profitable vehicle, especially if rivals start incentivizing.
If stocks fall 48 % again, investors are exiting.
If stocks fall it can change your perception of risk.
Stephanie Link, Managing Director at Nuveen, which has $ 970 billion in assets under management, already owns Facebook and she's looking to buy more if the stock falls in reaction to Zuckerberg's questioning.
If the stock falls by fifty percent due to short - term problems in the business, will you be able to continue holding without any emotional response if you can conservatively determine that the long - term potential of the business still remains promising?
Global stock markets plunged from 5 to 9 per cent abroad, and there was talk of closing the New York market if stocks fell more than 1,000 points.
Global stock markets plunged from 5 to 9 % abroad, and there was talk of closing the New York market if stocks fell more than 1,000 points.
We shall close the position if the stock falls below the trendline.
The long put strategy represents an alternative to simply selling a stock short, then buying it back at a profit if the stock falls in price.
If the stock fell, Dell would have to put up cash.
If the stock falls in value before you sell it, you would have a tax - saving capital loss.
FAF is well - managed in my opinion, so if the stock falls tomorrow, it won't stay there for long.
If the stock falls to a close only 3 % below that line of support, the experienced trader knows something is wrong and can sell with minimal loss.
Some people like to start with 1/2 or 1 / 3rd of their normal position size so that if the stock falls they can buy more at a lower basis (assuming the reasons for the drop haven't eliminated their thesis for owning the stock in the first place).
The long put strategy represents an alternative to simply selling a stock short, then buying it back at a profit if the stock falls in price.
If the stock falls below this bid price, it risks being delisted.
If the stock falls $ 5, you could still exercise your option as it would trade at $ 45.
How'd you feel if stocks fell 35 % and your $ 650,000 turned into $ 475,000?
But if stocks fell 50 %, your net worth would drop to $ 150,000 with option A — and plunge to $ 110,000 with option B.
If the stock falls in between those prices, both contracts expire worthless.
If the stock fell, Dell would have to put up cash.
If the stock falls within the floor and ceiling, you don't lose or gain anything.
If the stock fell to $ 25 during the year of the exercise, you would be subject to regular tax on only $ 22 per share ($ 25 - $ 3) and not be subject to the AMT adjustment at all.
If a stock fell to 50 % of book value, I'd stash it on the watchlist until it got to 40 %.
If the stock falls in price while you are «short,» you can buy it back at a lower price.
So you can enter a stop limit sell at $ 40 with a limit of $ 39, meaning that if the stock falls to $ 40, you will then have a limit order in effect to sell the stock at $ 39 or higher.

Not exact matches

If the stock breaks down and falls below the support zone, a new bearish trend may be beginning and the support zone becomes resistance.
But then the value of income stocks can fall too, as many have recently — especially if you overpay for them.
The inevitable trade - off is that you will be taking on some additional risk; if the growth doesn't materialize, the stock price could fall.
Still, even if you take out the Obama Trauma, in which the stock market fell nearly 13 % following the current president's election in 2008 — and, to be fair, the country was in the middle of a financial panic — the average return in a month following the election is 0.4 %.
«If the fall in the stock market continues, that suggests a higher risk of recession, which can't be good for small businesses and startups.»
«What we look at is, if stock prices or asset prices more generally were to fall, what would that mean for the economy as a whole?»
If Microsoft goes up more, or if Amazon slips after the stock starts trading, Bezos could fall back to No. If Microsoft goes up more, or if Amazon slips after the stock starts trading, Bezos could fall back to No. if Amazon slips after the stock starts trading, Bezos could fall back to No. 2.
Even with good fundamentals and a powerful growth rate, the company's stock could fall under pressure if its private stakeholders decided to ring the register.
On Tuesday, the large hedge fund Bridgewater Associates predicted the stock market would fall just over 10 % if Trump were to win the election.
If that's so, then the fall theatrics might also elicit minimal reactions on the stock market, which would drastically reduce their potential to damage the economy.
When oil prices fall, so do stocks in the sector, even if their income is not directly affected.
If chip stocks do fall, the analyst said, he would recommend shares of Micron as he's more bullish on DRAM's supply - demand fundamentals compared with the flash memory business.
Some short - sellers betting Valeant would fall also bought the stock to cover their positions this week, according to research firm S3 Partners, a move that might have cost them less if they'd waited.
In the months leading up to the stock market's free - fall, Hickey observed more and more investors acting as if they were entitled to uncharacteristic gains.
«Moreover, the history of the 6S cycle suggests that the stock may have further room to fall if consensus numbers decline following earnings,» he wrote.
Despite rising valuations and a soaring American stock market — the S&P 500 is up 136 % since it bottomed in March 2009 — it's hard to know if we're in the midst of a bull run, a sideways market or the prelude to a fall.
(This is also a reason to not buy stocks that are overvalued; if the fall, it is very likely that it is a normal market correction, and values probably won't rise again to the previous high for some time.)
If oil prices continue to fall, it will slip into deflation which would be bad news for stocks.
Even if they were to fall in a down stock market, it wouldn't be very far.
If the stock price falls dramatically, the yield will skyrocket.
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