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Hi Jon, Re: Recent activity.....................
I purchased 10% more of a solar company's stock last Friday. This AM I added 30% to my SCHW position as it swooned along with many a 'financial' stock. I see Raymond James Financial also stubbed a toe.
I put up a new haiku today relative to crypto. It seemed fitting!
Extraordinary
Popular Delusions And
The Madness Of Crowds
Is this 'Chapter 666' of this book?
What the Devil is going on here?
OAG Tom
https://www.amazon.com/Extraordinary-Popular-Delusions-Madness-Illustrated-ebook/dp/B003I84MBO/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2QAASM7OW2O07&keywords=extraordinary+popular+delusions&qid=1678727739&s=books&sprefix=extraordinary+popular+delusions%2Cstripbooks%2C447&sr=1-1
I had a buy on ERX yesterday.
Jon
Correction For VWAVE:
Oscillator: .48(Down .04 from previous week)
VWave 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 17th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 47% (Up 2 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 32% (Up 2 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 45% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 30% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: .548(Down .04 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #4458
Hmmmm, it seems someone turned up the Stink Machine today. I did one 12% buy in an alternative energy stock after it sold off heavily today.
I guess I should check. Maybe the sun's not going to shine ever again!
OAG
Hi Steve,
I did manage one sale yesterday in an airline company stock. It was almost 3x AIM's lowest buy price last December! Mr. Lichello was correct again.....
OAG Tom
Just sitting on my hands and waiting to take AIM
And they stink to high heaven!
The halls at iHub are echoing!!!
Stinky markets make for quiet posting.
VWave 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 10th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 45% (Down 7 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 30% (Down 5 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 45% (Down 1 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 30% (Down 1 from previous week)
Oscillator: .52 (Down 1.44 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #4458
I had similar results.
January was great, February gave back half the gains or so .
Since I am Toofuzzy
I will just follow AIM
February turned out to be a breath holding month for most of my various portfolios.
Simple Contributory IRA
9 International "Style" ETFs
U.S. Sector ETF Portfolio
10 Stock Composite (Individually managed with AIM)
Most were flat to down less than 3% for February but still up for the YTD.
Cash held in reserve was flat to up slightly for February.
Best regards,
OldAIMGuy Tom
Counterparty Risk.
2022 was the year it hit me (hardish)
Always being concerned about a what if scenario I built a small position in crypto, initially in Bitcoin. In an attempt to diversify and reduce my risk, I converted my holding into two funds run by Invictus Capital. Their initial offering was C20 a basket of the top 20 Cryptos. Subsequently they created another fund C10 hedged, which was designed to move to cash when the market became weak. Regular rebalances took place and both funds did exactly as hoped. There was always an emphasis on capital protection and safety. The majority of tokens were held in cold storage. They wouldn't commit funds to Ripple when it was being investigated. Invictus became the first regulated crypto based fund. All good I thought.
UNTIL
In an attempt to gain yield during the bear market, the USD was actually Luna backed UST an algorithmically backed stablecoin. The peg to the $ broke and Invictus were slow to sell. C10 hedged dropped to a level that was equal to the falls in the general market over the preceding months. Invictus were in trouble as a result and administrators appointed.
During the administration period - still ongoing. In an attempt to seek yield both C10 and C20 were exposed to the Celcius and FTX. The result very little left in the pot despite both funds being regulated and separate from Invictus. The management of the funds had the ability to mess up not once but thrice.
Not a recommendation, but an example of how Mr. Lichello's AIM can build a strong position from a meager start.
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=171330028
I think Mr. L would be happy with how AIM has handled this difficult investment over time.
Best wishes,
OAG
We do not miss that!
Growing up in SE WI, I remember that snowfalls like yours were not uncommon.
But seems not to happen nowadays as much as then.
You got WiFi in that cabin?
Currently 90 degrees and sunny here in DFW Metroplex.
Looks like you’re AIMING the snow in the right direction!
Take care,
Jon
This is a PV example (US data) comparing 20/80 SPXL (3x leveraged S&P500) and IEF (7 - 10 year treasury ETF) to that of 60/40 SPY/IEF
On the basis that ETF's could fail, potentially along with their custodian with them - perhaps due to some complex fraud, you might hold Treasury bonds directly instead of IEF, which has the benefit of being fully protected, no matter how much $$$ is invested.
Similar overall reward, but with 80% in the safest asset (Treasury bonds), instead of just 40%.
In that link I left it set at yearly rebalanced. In practice the higher the leverage the more often you should rebalance. 2x and once/year is generally sufficient, 3x and 6 monthly is a reasonable choice. 10x and you're looking at monthly rebalancing (basically what Zvi Bodie does, where he holds monthly Traded Options that reflect 10x leverage, so for instance for a conventional 60/40 stock/bond allocation he'd instead hold 6% in 10x leveraged stock exposure, leaving 94% in safe (treasury) bonds).
Clive
RE: Leveraged ETF's
I exclusively use leveraged ETF's - but from a counter-party risk reduction angle rather than scaling up exposure. For example a third as much in a 3x as would be held in a 1x. Nowadays (retired) wealth preservation is more important to me and since the 2008/9 financial crisis there's been greater tendency towards bail-in's ... where investors/savers are increasingly more likely to fund the bail out of banks/custodians in the event of failures, rather than taxpayers. Shares are commonly pooled, not actually yours, just a record of your name/share of that pool. Bank deposits aren't yours, again just your name recorded. Single bank/broker (custodian) risks are low, but do periodically present. US protections are better than for the likes of me (non-US) such that I keep counter-party risk down to below 20%, as such a loss whilst unpleasant is no different to what a portfolio may lose in some years naturally.
Leverage ETF's do tend to (proportionately) attenuate downside, amplify up-side, due to their daily rebalancing (reduce-low/add-high). The 'trick' is to play/work the trends/turning-points. IIRC Ocroft some years back presented a method whereby he'd delay actual trades until a existing trend had passed, for instance if AIM signalled sell, then he'd wait for subsequent sequential AIM sells to end before actually making a trade. Looking to place larger amounts traded at just past the peak (or just past the trough for sequential buys). I don't know how effective or not that was, nowadays I don't really trade other than via directed withdrawals.
Clive
Hi Tom…
Lots of much needed rain, snow pack in the Sierras is at its highest level in 30 years. The farmers in the Central Valley will actually have at least 35% of needed water for irrigation for the first time in years. Haven’t heard the word “drought” in a few months. ;o) Cold nights (for SoCal). Been a number of years since it’s been this cold. Reminds me of the smudge pots we used in the 60’s to keep the citrus trees from freezing. Those groves are gone replaced by housing tracts. Natural gas bills are triple what they were last year. But natural gas is at a 52 week low. It’s been interesting. ;o)
Take care.
Jon
Hi JD,
How's the weather where you are. News suggests parts of CA are getting rather unusual patterns including Snow!
OAG Tom
VWave 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 3rd
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 52% (Down 3 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 35% (Down 2 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 46% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 31% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.96 (Down .15 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #4458
RE: Sold 30% of my DHT
Congrats Toof.
Interesting Chart.
38 cent Dividend payable today.
How'd that happen since the regular dividend has been 2 or 4 cents?
Regardless, 'A bird in the hand...'
RE: A friend had the same procedure last year.
Hi Will.
Right! She's in much less pain after than the many months before. Especially the prior 3 months. She could hardly walk in December and January.
Her rehab is going great, but she's still not allowed to drive (I'm her Uber Driver).
She had her 2nd outpatient therapy session today, with at least 7 more weeks of that, 3 times per week and she'll be ready for daily walks, which she really wants to do.
RE: Better to buy the stock than more "stuff"
Thanks Toof.
I do both!
We are an Amazon Prime household.
- We have 7 active Echo devices (Alexa)
- We cut the cord a few years back and stream on Amazon Firesticks (which also have Alexa).
- Besides free and fast shipping, Amazon Prime allows me to back up unlimited photos at full resolution. I've been digitizing family photos for a few years now and have over 10,000 photos with more to go. Bottom line is that this service alone is worth the annual subscription.
- Of course shopping on Amazon is a breeze. Gifts for grandkids, spread out geographically is a no brainer. Plus previously hard to find items are almost always available on Amazon.
I just wish I would have bought their stock back in '99 instead of Overstock.
A friend had the same procedure last year.
Happy as Larry with his new knees.
Congrats on the AMZN purchase.
Better to buy the stock than more " stuff"
Toofuzzy
The 2x funds are definitely a lot safer and also work better with AIM
Toofuzzy
RE: Buy on AMZN
After the market meltdown on Tuesday, I checked my holdings to see how close they were to my Next Buy Price.
AMZN was within $1 of it, so I put in a rare GTC+Ext Buy order good until tomorrow.
About an hour ago while running an errand, I received my text notification that my Buy price was crossed.
Logged in when I got back home and sure enough, it executed an hour ago.
Added 19% to my Actual shares, and 11% to Actual+Virtual.
6% discount from the previous transaction (a Buy on 2/7).
Back to my Weed & Feed Project!
RE: Steve's trying for Haiku Poet Laureate!!
I give all the credit to 'The Wizard'
BTW: I wrote that while we were waiting for Nancy's 1st outpatient therapy session to begin.
She had bilateral knee replacement surgery 3 weeks ago yesterday. Both Knees!
She's doing great with rehab, but it is a 12 week process.
Stubborn German that she is:
"Es ist verboten, Knieprothesen zuzulassen, um mich von der Frühjahrsgärtnerei abzuhalten!"
It is forbidden to allow knee replacement to keep me from spring gardening
My guess is she'll be digging weeds by April 1st.
Steve's trying for Haiku Poet Laureate!!
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=171271801
What do you use to backtest? Will you be trying Split Safe and Vealies?
Re: LD-AIM spreadsheet
No problem Pedro.
Let me know if any questions.
Thanks for the info - all of you. I'm gonna back test a few with some 2x leveraged and see what it does. So far, the most success I have seen has been with monthly "buys" on the 3x on SOXL. Stay tuned.
Re: LD-AIM spreadsheet
Hi, Steve
Thank you so much for sending me your LD-AIM spreadsheet!!!
Best regards,
Pedro
Later on in the day I asked about a “Vealie.” Couldn’t respond. So we might still have an edge! ;o)
Hi Pedro
RE: LD-AIM Spreadsheet
I've sent it along and other than a few wording changes, the mechanics are the same as back then.
The workbook or cells are not protected, so please be mindful that you enter only in the spaces provided.
Let me know if you have any questions.
RE: I tried ChatGPT...“How does Automatic Investment Manager by Robert Lichello work?
Holy AIM-Brain Batman!!!
Perfect Description and Disclaimer!
And it only took 3 seconds?
We've been discussing it over the last 25 years plus!
A little scary though.
Re: LD-AIM spreadsheet
Hello, Steve
I hope you're doing well!!! I'm writing you to ask you if you could kindly send the revised LD-AIM spreadsheet. If so, you can send it to
penloci at Gmail dot com
But first and to save you the inconveniences, could you confirm me if the spreadsheet it's the same that the one that can be downloaded via the link in the post #35269 from Tom?
Thank you so much in advance.
Best regards,
Pedro
This morning I tried ChatGPT at chat.openai.com and asked the question, “How does Automatic Investment Manager by Robert Lichello work?”
This was my answer within 3 seconds:
“Automatic Investment Management (AIM) is an investment strategy developed by Robert Lichello in the 1970s. The strategy was designed to help investors manage their investments automatically using a set of rules and formulas. The basic idea behind AIM is to use a mathematical formula to determine when to buy and sell investments, such as stocks or mutual funds, in order to maximize, returns while minimizing risk. The formula used by AIM is known as the “money management formula” which takes into account the investors available funds, the current value of the investment, and the desired level of risk.
The money management formula is designed to automatically adjust the investors portfolio by buying more of an investment when its price is low and selling, when its price is high. The formula is based on the premise that investments tend to follow a cyclical pattern, with periods of growth, followed by periods of decline.
The basic steps of AIM are as follows:
1. Determine the amount of money available for investment (the “investment fund”)
2.Decide on a “value per share” for the investment. This is the price at which the investor wants to buy or sell the investment.
3. Calculate the “action limit” for the Investment. This is the maximum amount, the investor as willing to invest in the investment at its current price.
4. Determine the “buy point” and the “sell point” for the investment. The buy point is the price at which the investor will buy more of the investment, while the sell point is the price at which the investor will sell some or all of the investment.
5. Monitor the investment and make buy and sell decisions according to the money management formula.
The AIM strategy can be applied to a variety of investment types, including stocks, mutual funds, and exchange traded funds. However, it’s important to know that AIM is not a guaranteed way to make money and may not be suitable for all investors. It’s always important to do your own research and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions.”
——————————————————
Artificial Intelligence is on the move…
Best regards,
Jon
Interestingly, the last few pages of the TA A-Z doc cover both Williams %R and ZIG-ZAG...
A few Excerpts:
WILLIAM'S % R
Overview
Williams %R (pronounced "percent R") is a momentum indicator that measures
overbought/oversold levels. Williams %R was developed by Larry Williams....
...An interesting phenomena of the %R indicator is its uncanny ability to anticipate a
reversal in the underlying security's price. The indicator almost always forms a peak and
turns down a few days before the security's price peaks and turns down. Likewise, %R
usually creates a trough and turns up a few days before the security's price turns up.
ZIG ZAG
Overview
The Zig Zag indicator filters out changes in an underlying plot (e.g., a security's price or
another indicator) that are less than a specified amount. The Zig Zag indicator only shows
significant changes....
...The Zig Zag indicator is used primarily to help you see changes by punctuating the most
significant reversals.
It is very important to understand that the last "leg" displayed in a Zig Zag chart can
change based on changes in the underlying plot (e.g., prices). This is the only indicator in
this book where a change in the security's price can change a previous value of the
indicator. Since the Zig Zag indicator can adjust its values based on subsequent changes
in the underlying plot, it has perfect hindsight into what prices have done. Please don't try
to create a trading system based on the Zig Zag indicator--its hindsight is much better
than its foresight!
Be careful out there!
Done and Don Ken.
Let me know if any questions or comments.
RE: Volatility as selection criteria/trigger within AIM.
There have been many discussions here regarding Volatility and it's use within the AIM process.
One of them took place at our first gathering in 2000 when Mark Hing was discussing how his software (in development at the time) would 'optimize' AIM results which did take volatility into account, but I do not recall the specifics of that.
I also recall during that session that I proposed that we might be able to establish what I termed as 'An Efficient Volatility Index' that could possibly be used to that end.
Further, I believe Tom mentioned Zig-Zag Analysis during that session as well.
I mentioned that another one, William's %R, could also be valuable.
Zig-Zag, William's %R, along with many other measures is part of the Technical Analysis side of investment metrics.
Fundamental Analysis is the other side of that.
Many investors/traders use Fundamental Analysis to select the issues in which they intend to invest.
Then they use Technical Analysis to time their entry and/or exit points.
To that end, here's a little light reading to help us understand volatility (or to help us fall asleep).
It's only 231 pages!
http://freetradingdownloads.com/Technical%20Analysis%20from%20A%20to%20Z.pdf
VWave 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 24th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 55% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 37% (Unchanged from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 46% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 31% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 2.11 (Down .17 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588 for Tom's explanation
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Assistants The Grabber Toofuzzy |
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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