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Hi Steve, Re: Questions...............
1) When a stock or fund is fully funded with cash reserve per my thinking, I don't hold any GTC Limit Sell orders open on it. I wait until the price/share hits my target (or better) and then execute the 'vealie' and update my watchlist target prices on the buy and sell sides.
2) I've been using i-Hub's "Monitor" menu item in a separate window. There I've added a "Memo" column and in there I put the next buy and sell target prices. That's my watchlist. It keeps me up-to-date at a quick glance. I've had other software in the past for such monitoring, but those have all gone "Bye Bye" now, so this is how I handle them today.
3) Yes, if I'm lucky enough to have the price/share race past my next Sell target while I'm napping ( 😎 ) I ask AIM how much the current price would want me to sell and then use that value divided by 2 to add to the Portf Control. Then all's well until the next price move or check-up.
Also, if market risk moves upward so that my current cash percentage isn't satisfactory, I'll execute a sale at the next target price to bring cash up toward the new market risk cash suggestion. Going the other way on risk, if risk drops and my cash looks too fat, I'll just have a chance to do more 'vealies' until either risk rises again, or cash gets diluted by stock position growth, or a buy cycle comes along and naturally lowers cash again.
I'll look through my Newport histories and see if I have a good 3 year period of trades and vealies as an example.
Best regards,
OAG Tom
Thanks Tom!
So that approach assumes you don't have a GTC Sell order sitting out there?
But maybe just an alert if it gets to your next target price?
But if it does blow past that target price, you do the Classic Lichello calc to determine the amount to add to PC to execute the Vealie?
Hi Adam, Re: Double Vealies..............
I've done that, too. And I've also done "Full vealies" or take the entire selling amount and adding it to PC. That usually scrubs out any residual sell suggestion.
OAG Tom
If the vealie does not erase the sell completely, rather than doing another vealie, I just increase the amount I increment the PC until it erases the sell. The effect is the same as doing two vealies but it's easier.
Hi Grabber, Re: Minimum Trade Amount (value)....................
Let's say I have my AIM engine set to sell $1000 as a minimum trade at the next target price. Overnight the stock price goes up beyond the target, AIM would say to sell $1200 instead of just $1000. I'd divide the $1200 by 2 and add 600 to Portfolio Control. (not 500, which would be 1/2 the minimum trade order amount)
Generally, a vealie will only raise the "next" buy and sell targets by about 2.5% to 5%, so it doesn't move the Lichello Hold Zone by very much. Over the years in bullish times I'll see the cash max out and then a series of vealies interspersed with some sales. This keeps the cash reserve percentage near what my target level is as the overall engine grows. (The target for common stocks is usually derived from the v-Wave or the SignalPoint Market Risk Indicator. Some income funds I use a fixed maximum cash level, such as 20% or 30%)
In general, vealies have done a nice job for me. Limiting cash buildup during long bullish periods has been productive. The sacrifice is not being as well protected if a Black Swan with diarrhea decides to fly overhead. I also, as part of this strategy, conserve cash on the downside with delayed sequential buying and such. Basically, if you're going to restrict build-up of cash, you also need to be more restrictive and structured in the use of cash in downturns.
Hope this helps,
OAG
Not sure Tom.
'minimum trade amount'?
Good morning Steve, Re:..............is the Sell Market Order / 2 PC adjustment driven by market price (Lichello Calc), or by your pre calc'd Next Sell order?
In my case, it's the Sell Market Order's value, not the minimum trade amount. Half of the suggested Sell order is what I add to Portfolio Control. If that won't erase the urge to sell completely, then I'll do another 'vealie' and that will usually eliminate the sell suggestion.
Hope this helps,
OAG Tom
Hi. Sorry this reply is so late but I thought I had this set up to notify me of any post directed to me. I do not AIM the preferred shares and just treat them as a cash account. The value fluctuates so there is a variance between the the actual share values and the cash quantity carried on my spreadsheet. As of today, my actual cash available in terms of preferred shares is a couple of hundred dollars more than the spreadsheet. Not enough to affect anything.
RE: Questions for the board on 'Vealie's.
Will and I have recently been discussing 'Vealies' and I have some related questions...
Who, besides Tom of course, have used Vealies to keep a lid on cash reserve?
And if you have, How often (is it a regular part of managing your AIM program?
And if you have, is the Sell Market Order / 2 PC adjustment driven by market price (Lichello Calc), or by your pre calc'd Next Sell order?
For reference: Tom's original definition and rationale regarding 'Vealis' is below...
© VEALIE - Another change from Mr. L's origional plan I use with my AIM accounts is to limit my selling. If after an extended period of upward movement, like the '91 to '93 period, I find myself with too much cash (say over 50% for stocks and 33% for mutual funds) I quit taking AIM's sell advise. I, instead, pull a VEALIE© and take the dollar value of the sell market order divided by 2 and add that amount to Portfolio Control. This eliminates the sell order and moves the next buy and sell prices upward at the same time. I will continue doing that with each new sell order until the cash reserve is diluted to about what the Idiot Wave is suggesting at the time for stocks and funds. Then I start to sell again just as AIM would like. If cash reserve gets too fat again, I just repeat the same proceedure. This change allows me to stay more fully invested, expand my risk envelope slightly and participate in long term rallys as they come along. Using the Vealie I attempt to keep the cash reserve within about 10% of what the Idiot Wave is suggesting (IW says 33% cash, I keep my cash between 30% and 33%)
Thanks!
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of March 8th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 65% (Down 2 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 43% (Down 2 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 49% (Up 1 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 33% (Up 1 from previous week)
Oscillator: 2.21 (Up 1.22 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
RE: AIMing a security across different accounts.
Hi Adam. What you say makes sense to me.
I suggest a common cash reserve for both.
Then when you want to see how the overall combined program is doing over time, add up the total 'Stock Value', #
Shares', Portfolio Control, and Total Cash and go from there.
AIMing a security across different accounts. I'm wondering if anyone is doing this and your opinion. I have a few ETFs that are distributed over 2 or more of my accounts and I've AIMed them with one machine, and now I think this was a mistake and I'm separating the spreadsheets so each account has a separate spreadsheet. Combining makes the bookkeeping more complicated, but worst of all, since the accounts are very uneven, the buys/sells can overwhelm the smaller account. I could distribute the sell/buy across accounts but that just makes things complicated so now I'm separating the accounts and using a separate spreadsheet for each.
Adam
You're most welcome Tom G.
I'll ask my 80 YO Mother in Law if she has them.
But she may not know even if she does.
I'll probably need to look myself when we take our annual trip back home in Wisconsin in early July.
I hope someone does have a copy. I asked YouTube to “reinstate” the video as they indicate it was removed for some inappropriate reason? Nice old documents! The cassettes would have been fun to hear. Thanks for the welcome too.
Tom G TGSTATS
Forgot!
It had cassette tapes, but my father in law didn't give those to me.
I went out to the Internet Archive and searched Videos using Lichello, AIM, etc. but got no results.
You Tube does have Jeff Webber's vids along with Michael Hicks, but no Lichello stuff..
Somebody, somewhere must have a bootleg copy!
Forgot to include the picture
IIRC, the infomercial price was $300
128 hand typed single sided pages describing the AIM System plus 6 Appendices.
- Blank AIM Forms:
- Listing of No Load Mutual Funds
- Listing of Newsletters and Advisory Services
- NYSE Stock Symbols
- Suggested Reading (Books, Newspapers and Magazines)
Thanks Tom and Welcome,
I watched it on YouTube a couple of years ago but haven't looked for it in a while. I'm sorry to see it 'disappear' from our collective history.
Thanks for the notification,
OAG Tom
Thanks Pedro, Re: Money Spinner...........................
It's been a while since the Money Spinner has been discussed here on the Board. There was quite a bit of discussion years ago. It's quite similar to AIM but I don't recall the differences.
Best wishes and Welcome,
OAG Tom
It was available on You Tube?
Crap!
I remember actually seeing the infomercial on TV!
Way late at night.
Watched it a few times!
No DVRs back then!
My late father-in-law saw it too. Months later when he was in town for a visit.
He handed me a thick 3 ring binder and told me to 'find the fatal flaw'.
I never could.
The Money Spinner book
Hello, aimers
Though I'm still a lurker, I'd like to contribute to this terrific board (just as all of you have done in the past). I hope this link is of your interest:
https://archive.org/details/moneyspinner0000chuc/page/n6/mode/1up?q=%22Penny+stocks%22
To get full access to the book you have to register your user and then press "Borrow for 1 hour" button.
Enjoy.
Pedro
The infomercial with Robert Lichello is no longer content on YouTube. Can you all confirm my experience please? And if same, what can we do to get that video back? The only video we have of Lichello! My first post here. I have his book. I follow the method and tell everyone I care to try to help. The video was just a nice thing to watch.
Thanks,
Tom G. TGSTATS
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of March 1st
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 67% (Down 5 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 45% (Down 3 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 48% (Down 1 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 32% (Down 1 from previous week)
Oscillator: .99 (Down 1.48 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
Not a recommendation, just a observation, free download https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/download/file.php?id=3343 of Seth Klarman's Margin of Safety book that literally sells for thousands of dollars online due to being quite rare (as only a few hundred copies were ever printed). Book pages 217 onward align well with AIM, average-in rather than lump-in, selling is normally hard to do - unless you have AIM nudging you :)
Clive
Thanks Tom.
Your Wayback Machine has been very valuable to those of us who go Way Back! 😫
Did you also forget that you have that link up top as a 'Sticky'? 😏
Re: Steve's referenced AIM material from the old aim-users.com web site:
https://web.archive.org/web/20120118093621id_/http://www.aim-users.com/aimchng.htm
Thanks Steve for bringing this up. I'd almost forgotten I'd done this way back then. It would appear I did the various VTSS simulations up to around 2001. I don't remember when VTSS was bought out, but it either merged or was acquired by another semi company. That was the end of that particular "Love Story" with this stock. I note that Mr. Buynhold did quite well, beating the AIM examples. However, he also consumed 342 gallons of MAALOX along the way!
Best wishes,
OAG
Boy, Steve. That's jumping into the Wayback Machine!
My best guess is total return was the end value of the stock+cash divided by the starting stock+cash.
For the average amount at risk, I would average each period's invested percentage over the test. In this case it appears it was 56% invested on average.
(Sum of each period's invested percentage divided by the total number of periods)
Then, Return On (average) Capital At Risk (ROCAR) is simply total return percentage divided by the decimal of average invested. In this case, it's 0.56. Then, 2146% / 0.56 = 3832% ROCAR.
ROCAR gives us a feel of how hard AIM has worked to achieve its results. You can't take ROCAR to the bank but you can use it to compare AIM's result to Mr. Buynhold. Mr. Buynhold's total return and ROCAR are the same since he's 100% invested and at risk (divisor = 1.000).
That's about the best I can do after about 20+ years!
Thanks for asking. A CPA friend of mine reviewed the concept at the time said it was valid for risk comparison.
Best regards,
OAG Tom
Hi Tom.
As I continue working on Hold Zones and AIM Tracking, I went back to the AIM Q&A to look at Split Safe and 'Vealie' to refresh my memory as to their use and purpose. It was very helpful.
I went further down that rabbit hole by going to the link on AIM Improvements and results summaries.
Specifically on VTSS. I wanted to verify how you calculated Total Return, Capital at Risk and ROCAR (although I think ROCAR is Total Return Divided by Capital at Risk).
Anyway, can you please share how you calc the first 2?
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of February 23rd
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 72% (Up 7 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 48% (Up 5 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 49% (Up 1 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 33% (Up 1 from previous week)
Oscillator: 2.47 (Up 1.20 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
Hi Will,
I use PC percentage on both the buy and sell side as the minimum order Value. As mentioned, the share count buying will be larger than the share count selling at that minimum.
OAG
Hi Will, Re: Min Order Value as a percentage of Portfolio Control..................
It's worked for me over a long period of time.
As a side consequence, both the buy and sell side orders are the same dollar value, but not the same share count. If you usually sell 5% min of shares, you'll buy about 6% more shares at the target price with this method.
Have a great weekend,
OAG Tom
Hi Will.
Do you use Portfolio Control or Stock Value in respect of the sell side minimum sale %
Short answer is Portfolio Control (on both Sell and Buy sides).
And you do this to determine what the Stock Value would be at point of Sale or Buy.
Also important is that both Safe% and Minimum% figure onto that determination.
The PC Divisor is the very first step in that process.
Which begs the question,
Do you use Portfolio Control or Stock Value in respect of the sell side minimum sale %
Thanks.
Will
This may be the missing link.
"I let my minimum order size be a percentage of Portfolio Control, so each buy increases the size of the minimum order. That makes AIM look for a slightly lower price for the "next buy."
I've been using a percentage of stock value, which natrually diminishes as the falls.
I will take a look thanks.
Will
HI Tom
Maybe Will can use some of these ideas as well.
That's exactly what he was trying to do.
First pass was sequentially increasing Safe, which did not look right to him.
I suggested Increasing Min Buy % and that looked to me like it works.
He's going to play around with it this week and see what he can derive.
Thanks Steve,
Re: Conserving Cash with Consecutive buys.........................
I let my minimum order size be a percentage of Portfolio Control, so each buy increases the size of the minimum order. That makes AIM look for a slightly lower price for the "next buy."
I also still am pretty solid on the 30 day delay between sequential buys. That helps when there's a long term bearish period.
For some years now I've also been adding 5% to the Buy Resistance (SAFE) with each sequential buy. That also forces AIM to look for a deeper discount between buys. (Then when directions change and I get my first AIM directed Sale, I revert the SAFE back to 10%)
Maybe Will can use some of these ideas as well.
Thanks again for the link,
OAG Tom
Not sure specifically, but it's been a few years since I bookmarked that page.
I've been working with Will to help him come up with Hold Zones in order to conserve cash with consecutive Buys.
So when I went into my 'archives' I happened across the link.
I Stumbled across him a couple of years ago. He reignited my desire to look into AIM again.
I'd fallen into the trap of trying to get rich quick. Now I'm older I'm happy to get rich slow.
Thanks Steve,
Where did you come across Mr Hicks and his AIM interest?
OAG Tom
From the FWIW Dept....
https://authormichaelhicks.com/automatic-investment-management-spreadsheet-template/
Mr. Hicks is primarily a Sci-Fi author but for whatever reason, put together a 'By the Book' AIM tracking worksheet available for download.
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of February 16th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 65% (Down 5 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 43% (Down 3 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 48% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 32% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.27 (Down .10 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of February 9th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 70% (Up 8 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 46% (Up 5 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 48% (Down 1 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 32% (Down 1 from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.37 (Down 1.51 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
Hi Tom, That sunset shot looks nice. Exactly where is that and what's there to do?
Adam
Have you stopped giving rings out at every thousand posts ?
Toofuzzy
Absolutely Fabulous
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Here's a handy "Quick AIM Calculator" for finding the next AIM directed Buy and Sell prices for your portfolio holdings:
A.I.M. Users Bulletin Board (AIMUSERS): Thanks LC, Now they can use the "calculator" again! (advfn.com)
While the AIM book is no longer being reprinted, it is available from Amazon for their Kindle for $5.99.
http://www.amazon.com/How-Make-Stock-Market-Automatically-ebook/dp/B002VKJ1EI/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1395757939&sr=1-1&keywords=lichello
Mr. Lichello wrote the book on AIM in 1977. In the mid-'80s he put an infomercial on AIM on late night TV and attempted to sell his workbook and audio tapes.
(1) How To Make $1Million In The Stockmarket Infomercial - 1985 - YouTube
It's a reasonable review of the AIM method for those who are unfamiliar.
Run A Successful Equity Warehouse
Welcome to the AIM Users Bulletin Board. This is the thread to post your thoughts, questions and comments on the use of Robert Lichello's Automatic Investment Management for handling the risk of being involved in the Equities markets.
The AIM strategy gives the user LIFO gains of 20% minimum if the method is followed "by the book." It is ideally suited to those seeking long term investment growth while managing the risk of being invested.
Thoughts on being a successful Individual Investor
I wrote this book review a long time ago. It's a trader's interpretation of
Sun Tzu's "Art Of War." I related it to AIM as best I could.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mr. Lundell says, "Today's financial markets are the last bastion of unabashed conflict.....
To participate, you must be your own general, devising a strategy, gathering information, executing your plan, and adapting to the situation."
How can we use AIM and the v-Wave for strategic and tactical planning to carry out Mr. Lundell’s requirements to participate in the Equity Markets?
"Be your own general"
You are in charge. You are responsible. When you win, you benefit. When you lose, only you are to blame.
a) Broad trends persist. Discover them. They will survive boom and bust.
b) Don't contemplate engaging in war while beholden to another. They could become your ruler!
To me this means "Stay away from Margin Buying unless you are certain of victory."
c) Establish and maintain a "Baseline of Survival" for your command.
This is the "income" side of my overall portfolio.
d) Know that reality is governed by Darwinism; Long Term Survival belongs to the fittest.
"Devise a Strategy"
Our strategy is to sell inventory into market strength and to buy into market weakness. Robert Lichello's AIM algorithm provides us with a systematic approach to follow that employs this strategy.
a) Sell quality merchandise to all those willing to pay.
b) Buy quality merchandise when the price offers reasonable hope to resell at a profit.
c) Let the allocation of resources and inventory be governed by the course of the market and AIM's guidance.
"Gather Information"
Today there is no excuse for not being informed.
a) Differentiate between information VOLUME and QUALITY.
b) Differentiate between FACTS and OPINION.
c) Find good sources of judgement where you cannot act as judge.
d) Information is trusted only when provided by those proved trustworthy.
"Adapt to the Situation at Hand"
The v-Wave measures general U.S. Market Risk (and may be sensitive to world market risk) from low to average to high. This helps you gauge the situation by:
a) Gauging your initial cash reserve requirements on new investments
b) Gauging your on-going cash reserve requirements on established investments
c) Judging whether to establish a bias for accumulation or distribution
d) Possibly starting no new AIM accounts when the v-Wave is showing High Risk
e) Possibly ignoring all AIM Buy Signals during v-Wave High Risk events.
f) Following all AIM buy and sell signals during v-Wave Average Risk events
g) Possibly ignoring all AIM Sell signals during v-Wave Low Risk events
h) Re-assessing your "Baseline For Survival" at times when AIM has your account heavily in Cash
i) Always attempting to beat measured inflation by 5 basis points minimum after all taxes and living expenses are paid. If you do this consistently, in good and bad markets, you will be winning long term
j) Possibly using "vealies" when your positions are cash rich relative to the v-Wave. Limiting supply helps to keep Momentum player’s Demand high.
"Execute your Plan"
Set the plan in motion; know that it takes time for realization. Follow the plan without hesitation allowing the goals to be realized. The strategy is sound so execution is all that is required.
a) Buy when the plan says
b) Sell when the plan says
c) Be very patient when no buy or sell signals are being generated
Reading Mr. Lundell's interpretation of Sun Tzu's work will help you focus on your own plan. It will arm you with knowledge of what others not using AIM are doing in the market. Understanding Short Term Trader's strategy and tactics is like having a spy in the enemy's camp. AIM users can profit by knowing just how these people think and act. AIM acts as almost a mirror image of what goes on in a trader's mind.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The v-Wave........
Mr. Lichello used fixed cash starting levels; first it was 50/50 then 67/33 and in the last edition of his book 80/20 for the Equity/Cash ratio. This "one size fits all" approach is like a broken watch that shows the correct time twice a day but is wrong the rest of the time!
Minstrlman, a regular contributor here, helped gather data from Value Line and formed a highly capable risk-cash indicator for our use. Since then, J Derb continued his work each week. As an adjunct to the AIM methodology we now have a Cash Indicator which helps guide our starting and ongoing Cash Reserve level of AIM relative to measured market risk. It can be used as a general market barometer or specifically with the AIM method. The v-Wave (or VW) is derived from the Value Line "Appreciation Potential - Next 3-5 Years" (VLAP) indicator shown weekly in their Summary and Index Section for their 1700 stock edition. Looking back through V/L's history we find the peak Appreciation Potential occurred 12/23/1974 at +234%. Our continuous database starts January of 1982 and we scaled our "zero cash" to the market risk low point of early that year. We take the VLAP and manipulate it to get an indication of how much cash should be reserved for diversified mutual fund AIM accounts. It should be multiplied by your stock or portfolio's BETA to get the cash reserve level of less diversified or more aggressive holdings.
v-Wave Weekly Cash Reserve Indicator For AIM Users
Current years of the v-Wave:
For diversified portfolios the Median value for the v-Wave is 29.5%. High Risk is 34% cash or higher for individual company stocks. Low Risk is 24% cash or lower.
To get a more proper cash level for individual company stocks multiply the current "Diversified" value by 1.5. This gives us 51% as the high risk threshold and 36% for the low risk boundary.
Looking at the cumulative risk of the v-Wave gives another perspective:
Cumulative v-Wave is calculated by taking each week's v-Wave Stock value, subtracting the median value from it and adding it to the previous total.
Significant historical events are shown nicely here and the v-Wave's response at those times.
v-Wave Calculations can be found at #30219. The data are a work-in-progress for now.
TooFuzzy provided us with a handy "Quick AIM Calculator" Here's a link to that page:
A.I.M. Users Bulletin Board (AIMUSERS): Thanks LC, Now they can use the "calculator" again! (advfn.com)
(follow the link on the above page)
AIM has a predictable pattern of "cash burn" in a declining market. Depending upon the SAFE settings AIM will generate new buy orders sequentially as share prices decline. It can be helpful to know in advance about how deeply AIM is going to draw down one's cash reserves. This link is to the "Cash Burn" AIM page. It shows various end points based upon the starting cash reserve level. Here's a link to that page:
"" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer ugc" target="_blank">http://www.aim-users.com/cashburn.htm"; rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer ugc">A.I.M. Cash Burn Rate (archive.org)
Best wishes,
Old AIM Guy
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