The Solution To Investment Losses (2024)

By Todd Tresidder

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Holding For The Long-Term Is No Solution

Key Ideas

  1. Why “buying” that day and “holding” an existing investment loss is the same thing.
  2. Reveals the one question to ask yourself to evaluate whether you want to accept risk or reduce it.
  3. How to rebuild your portfolio after experiencing investment losses.

A reader commented on my blog,

“Todd, my portfolio is mauled. I feel stuck and don't know what to do. Any suggestions?”

The simple answer is problems like this are avoided througha disciplined investment risk management strategy, and the damage will be repaired only afterimproving your investment risk management skills.

Let me explain the solution to investment losses with a little excerpt from my forthcoming book on investment risk management…

Every day youwill make one of three decisions with your investments – buy, sell, or hold – whether that decision is consciously madeor not.

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What is seldom understood is that a hold is the same thing to your portfolio as a buy because it places that asset's risk profile in your portfolio.

In other words, every day you hold an investment is effectively the same thing as choosing to buy that asset on that day. They're mathematically equivalent.

You can only have one of two positions – in or out – for any given investment.

(You can theoretically also be short, but that would be highly inappropriatefor most reader's skill level. The mathematics of profiting on the short sideare difficult for full time professional investors, not to mention normal investors, so we'll limit this discussion to long or out. The principles remain the same either way.)

You can really only do one of two things:accept risk or remove risk. It's just that simple.

You can buy, sell, or hold, with buy and hold effectively being the same thing, because they both accept risk for the next day, week, and so on.

Related:How Your Financial Advisor is Taking 75% of Your Retirement Income (or More!) Video, PDF download, or Audio.

The reason I mentionthis is because a lot of people holdinvestments because they don't know what else to do in this difficult market environment.

They fail to realize “no decision” is really a decision by default, because it keeps the risk in the portfolio, which is equivalent to buying the same security that day.

Holding Is Mathematically Equivalent To Buying

They get stuck like a deer frozen in the headlights of an oncoming car.The poor animal gets immobilized by fearin the middle of the road thinking no decision is safer than a decision – meanwhile, theoncoming car advances closer and closer to the inevitable slaughter.

As long as fear keeps the deer from selling and getting out of the road, he's unconsciously choosing to accept the risk of standing in the road.

It's the same thing for an investor.

Related: The science of investment strategy – simplified!

You can either accept risk or remove risk. You're choosing to be in the road, or choosing toget out of the road.

Most importantly, choosing to stay in the road and accept the risk is equivalent to choosing to jump in the road in the first place. Either way, you accept the risk of being in the road. There's no functional difference: theresult is the same.

So, do you want to accept risk, or do you want to reduce risk in your portfolio? That's the decision you face today – and every day – regardless of what happened in the past.

Every day is a new day. By not doing anything, you're unconsciously choosing to acceptwhatever risk profile is already built into your portfolio.

Consider this: would you buy the portfolio you have today if you were sitting comfortably on the sidelines in cash?

What would you do differently?

See My Related Book…

These are important questions to answer because holding your portfolio by doing nothing is essentially the same thing as buying it today.

Pretty wild, eh?

Let me be clear that I'm not recommending selling any more than I'm recommending buying. The analogy above should not be interpreted as a recommendation tobuy or sell investments. That's your decision to make, and only you have to live with the consequences.

I'm just trying to help you get clear on one key aspect of your decision process. There are times when it's very wise and safe to cross the road to get to fertile grazing grounds on the other side, and there are times when it's tantamount to suicide.

Rebuilding Your Portfolio After An Investment Loss Is The Same Decision

With regards to rebuilding your portfolio once you're already facing sizable losses,the logic is identical.

Your investmentsare already down. It doesn't matter if you sell the assets and technically realized the loss or not. The loss is real either way.

A lot of people incorrectly believe that because they haven't sold their stocks or real estate yet, that the lossissomehow magically transformed into something less real. That is pure emotional folly.

Related: How to take back control of your portfolio

The value is the value today and has zero relationship to the past. You must emotionally mark your portfolio to market every day. It's only worth what a willing buyer will pay for it today, and that's determined by the market – end of story.

The only decision remaining is what investment strategy you'll use going forward to begin rebuilding.

Don't get stuck in the past holding a bunch of deadwood old assets just because they're down and you don't want to realize the loss.

You must always be thinking in terms of whatthe best assets will be going forward. Think offensively because every day is new: focus on an offensive plan to rebuild.

You must prune a portfolio likeyou prune a tree to eliminate the gnarled, old deadwood, and make room for healthy, new growth.

Your portfolio is either growing or it's dying – there's no middle ground.By pruning the old clutter from the past, you make room for new growth in the future.

That's how nature works, and that's how investing works.

In Summary…

In summary, every day you face a decision to buy, hold, or sell. Every day you either accept risk or remove risk.

When you make no decision, you effectively choose tobuy your portfolio that day because it keeps the risk in the portfolio.

All losses in a portfolio should be emotionally recognized every day whether you have physically recognized them through the sales process or not.

The advantage to doing this is it leaves you with the simple decision to determine your best investment strategy going forward, without any emotional clutteror attachment to what has happened in the past.

Emotional clarity is essential tosuccessfully investing for the long-term.

I hope this helps you get grounded so you can make wise decisions to recover from your current losses.

Investment Losses Suck!

Here’s how to make more by losing less…

If you're looking for an investment strategy that goes beyond "buy and hold" while controlling risk and requiring as little as 30 minutes a month to manage, this is the answer. It’s so good I wish I had built it myself. Take back control of your portfolio and start getting results today.

Learn More Here

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The Solution To Investment Losses (2024)

FAQs

How do you overcome investment losses? ›

You might be tempted to jump back in with both feet, but consider taking on smaller positions than you're used to. For example, if under normal circ*mstances you never risk more than 5% of your trading portfolio on a single trade, after a big loss you might reduce that to 2% or 3% until you feel you're on solid ground.

How to claim investment losses on taxes? ›

You must fill out IRS Form 8949 and Schedule D to deduct stock losses on your taxes. Short-term capital losses are calculated against short-term capital gains to arrive at the net short-term capital gain or loss on Part I of the form.

How do you calculate investment losses? ›

Take the selling price and subtract the initial purchase price. The result is the gain or loss. Take the gain or loss from the investment and divide it by the original amount or purchase price of the investment.

Can you write off 100% of stock losses? ›

If you own a stock where the company has declared bankruptcy and the stock has become worthless, you can generally deduct the full amount of your loss on that stock — up to annual IRS limits with the ability to carry excess losses forward to future years.

How to overcome losses in business? ›

What to do if you're operating at a loss
  1. Reduce your expenses. Is there anything you can cut from your spending? Can you reduce the amount of drawings you're taking from the business? ...
  2. Increase your sales. Can you charge more for your product or service? ...
  3. Get advice — an advisor may be able to help you turn it around.

How do you solve investment returns? ›

Return on investment (ROI) is an approximate measure of an investment's profitability. ROI is calculated by subtracting the initial cost of the investment from its final value, then dividing this new number by the cost of the investment, and finally, multiplying it by 100. ROI has a wide range of uses.

How much investment losses can you write off? ›

No capital gains? Your claimed capital losses will come off your taxable income, reducing your tax bill. Your maximum net capital loss in any tax year is $3,000. The IRS limits your net loss to $3,000 (for individuals and married filing jointly) or $1,500 (for married filing separately).

Can I offset investment losses against tax? ›

Losses made from the sale of capital assets are not allowed to be offset against income, other than in very specific circ*mstances (broadly if you have disposed of qualifying trading company shares). You cannot claim a loss made on the disposal of an asset that is exempt from capital gains tax (CGT).

How long can you claim investment losses on taxes? ›

Key Takeaways

Capital losses that exceed capital gains in a year may be used to offset capital gains or as a deduction against ordinary income up to $3,000 in any one tax year. Net capital losses in excess of $3,000 can be carried forward indefinitely until the amount is exhausted.

Where do I claim investment losses? ›

Report most sales and other capital transactions and calculate capital gain or loss on Form 8949, Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets, then summarize capital gains and deductible capital losses on Schedule D (Form 1040).

Where do I enter investment losses? ›

You'll have to file a Schedule D form if you realized any capital gains or losses from your investments in taxable accounts. That is, if you sold an asset in a taxable account, you'll need to file. Investments include stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds, options, real estate, futures, cryptocurrency and more.

How much money do I need to invest to make $1000 a month? ›

A stock portfolio focused on dividends can generate $1,000 per month or more in perpetual passive income, Mircea Iosif wrote on Medium. “For example, at a 4% dividend yield, you would need a portfolio worth $300,000.

Why are my capital losses limited to $3,000? ›

The $3,000 loss limit is the amount that can be offset against ordinary income. Above $3,000 is where things can get complicated. The $3,000 loss limit rule can be found in IRC Section 1211(b). For investors with more than $3,000 in capital losses, the remaining amount can't be used toward the current tax year.

How many years can stock losses be carried forward? ›

If the net amount of all your gains and losses is a loss, you can report the loss on your return. You can report current year net losses up to $3,000 — or $1,500 if married filing separately. Carry over net losses of more than $3,000 to next year's return. You can carry over capital losses indefinitely.

Can I use more than $3000 capital loss carryover? ›

The IRS caps your claim of excess loss at the lesser of $3,000 or your total net loss ($1,500 if you are married and filing separately). Capital loss carryover comes in when your total exceeds that $3,000, letting you pass it on to future years' taxes. There's no limit to the amount you can carry over.

What happens if your investments lose money? ›

It only becomes money again when you sell it. If you sell your stocks for less than you paid for them, only then have you lost money. That lost money went to the owner of the stock that you bought at the time you bought it.

What is the $3000 loss rule? ›

If your capital losses exceed your capital gains, the amount of the excess loss that you can claim to lower your income is the lesser of $3,000 ($1,500 if married filing separately) or your total net loss shown on line 16 of Schedule D (Form 1040), Capital Gains and Losses.

Can you offset investment losses? ›

Losses made from the sale of capital assets are not allowed to be offset against income, other than in very specific circ*mstances (broadly if you have disposed of qualifying trading company shares). You cannot claim a loss made on the disposal of an asset that is exempt from capital gains tax (CGT).

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