SakeTami
Tom Nash
Tom Nash

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TOM'S DCA STRATEGY TUTORIAL - NEW MEMBERS

Welcome to the Patreon community!

This tutorial is designed to walk you through the step-by-step process of using my signature Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) system, including the powerful "double down" feature to maximize your returns in the stock market. Let’s get started.

Step 1: Understand the Basics of DCA

Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is consistently investing a fixed amount of money into the stock market at regular intervals, regardless of market fluctuations. The beauty of this method is its simplicity and its effectiveness in smoothing out the highs and lows of stock prices over time.

By purchasing shares when prices are both high and low, you can lower your overall average cost per share and reduce the emotional stress of market volatility without timing the market.

Example:

Step 2: Setting Up Your DCA Profile

Step 3: Master the "Double Down" Strategy

While traditional DCA involves regular contributions, our system introduces a powerful enhancement: the "double down" strategy. This method is reserved for moments when a stock or ETF experiences a significant drop but remains fundamentally strong.

How the Double Down Works:

Example:

Step 4: Stay Disciplined

One of the most important aspects of the 2X DCA system is discipline. It’s easy to get swept up by emotions when the market moves dramatically, but by sticking to the plan, regular DCA and doubling down only when appropriate, you can avoid the pitfalls of trying to time the market.

Over the long term, this consistent, level-headed approach has the potential to build substantial wealth.

Step 5: Review and Adjust as Needed

As your portfolio grows, you may want to adjust your contributions based on changes in your income, financial goals, or market conditions. Review your investments periodically, but don’t let short term volatility cause you to stray from the plan.

By using my 2X DCA and Double Down System, you’re positioning yourself to ride out market volatility and capitalize on significant opportunities when they arise. Remember, the stock market tends to rise over the long term, and this strategy is built for patient, disciplined investors who understand the power of consistency.

Stick with the system, stay patient, and let time and compound growth work their magic. Welcome to the community, and we look forward to seeing you succeed in your investing journey!

Comments

Please share with me as well! Thanks!

Lloyd Godson

Hi Tom thanks for the DCA approach; if I can invest 500 per week how much of that should I imvest on a weekly basis has I would need to put a weekly amount for double down when price is below 20% (I e cumulating for those down times). Thanks

Dan Buj

Niels asked a question about starting, scaling in etc and you replied you had a lecture on this topic. Would you share the link please? Thanks for the work you're doing, appreciated.

James

could I also get a DM with a link to it? Thanks!

Cosmin Carabet

same here, lump sum, been afraid to invest all at once and missed the past 35% runup for S&P

Shawn Lee

Will you DM it to me, too, please?

JP

Signed up this month because this approach really makes sense to me. So if I want to start with the DCA approach right now but have a lot of money sitting in cash account how do I start investing say into something like Palantir? It's so high right now. Should I put all the money in right now or should I DCA over time, but over how much time?

Edmund Kim

Thx, I replied to your DM..

Niels

I made a complete lecture on this specific topic Niels. Just sent you a dm here on patreon. Reply there and I’ll guide you how to find it

Generico Fakero

Hi there, just signed up nice to be here.. A question regarding the DCA approach. Say I have in my trading acc. 500 K ready to follow the DCA on say on 3 stocks/ETF 20,40,40. How to start, (scale in) - I mean what are the suggested inflow now (ie 250 K) and how much ie monthly every the 1.? Thanks

Niels

Welcome to the family Brian

Generico Fakero

I wish that someone had told me about that system 40 years ago, I am a little long in the tooth to be embarking on it but the principle is sound and should be used by every retail investor.

Brian Esau


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