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Re: Toofuzzy post# 42154

Friday, 06/23/2017 8:46:34 AM

Friday, June 23, 2017 8:46:34 AM

Post# of 47132
Hi Toof, Re: Math and Quick AIM Calculator...........

If you look at $11.11 and divide it by $9.26 it comes close to a 20% differential even if dividing 9.26 by $11.11 gives you 16.7%.

It somewhat depends upon the minimum order and of what it is a percentage. If 10% of share count, 10% of Portfolio Control (what I use) or 10% of stock value @ suggested buy price.

Remember that sequential buys are affected by the increase in Portfolio Control. PC goes up by 1/2 the value of the buy order. If that order was around 10% then PC increased by 5%. The sequential order is calculated from that higher PC value or around 5%.

With 5% minimum order size, sequential buy drops are around 2.5% of previous orders.

To cover the distance from a recent buy to the "next sell price" you look at the total SAFE range (in this case 10%) and then add to it the minimum trade amount at that next trade price (it's relative to the new PC value). There probably is some whole share rounding going on, too.

AIM is built with a bias to accumulate shares over time. That is because of the increase in Portfolio Control with each buy. You'll note that the value of the remaining shares after that first Sale at $11.11 is almost exactly the Portfolio Control value. AIM caps the value at risk in a rising market at the Portfolio Control value plus whatever Sell SAFE one uses. With zero Sell SAFE, each sale will return residual value back near PC value.

I think this all looks okay.

Best regards,

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