Post
Topic
Board Speculation
Re: Buy the DIP, and HODL!
by
Marvelockg
on 04/04/2024, 10:06:50 UTC
So, the punchline is that due to my errors, my lack of properly keeping enough cash on hand, there remains a certain quantity of my BTC that I ended up selling in the price range between $3,800 to $4,200 that I was not able to buy back.. which probably was around 1-2% of my then BTC stash that was not able to be bought back.. .. except, I suppose later that I probably ended up buying some of that back at higher prices.. but even that is not really clear in terms of whether my BTC stash might have had ended up being forever reduced by 1-2% because of the price point in which they were sold and the fact that BTC prices were near bottom prices.. so ultimately it was a mistake of selling low rather than selling high.. and then never being able buy back at lower than the sell point (except for my mentioning that about half of it did seem to have had been bought back, so instead of shaving off 3-4% of my BTC stash the end result was only 1-2% of my BTC stash having had been shaved off.

this has helped a lot to showing the importance of making proper plan on how we use our reserve funds so we don't necessarily sell our holdings at a cheaper price because what we've set out as our emergency funds isn't enough to meet up with the issue at hand.  For your situation, it's even not all that emergency case since you already hard plans on making such expenses and this is also what happens when we feel that we are waisting away certain funds as it's not bringing us interest and that it's better we invest it into a small project since we've not seen any possibility of an emergency happenjng anytime soon and when it finally happens that we have to fix issues with our funds our holding becomes the most trusted source to fall back on.

Maybe while making plans for our emergency funds, factors like how much from our monthly income will be going into emergency should be properly spelt out and a strict measure regarding the need to never touch it except for real cases of emergency be set out. But then, outside of an unplanned situation, thier might be cases when we have personal projects like marriage or cases when we might have a child coming into the family which directly means that our expenses will become more than what it use to be and a need to necessarily adjust how much we allocate to our DCA, house upkeep and how much should be kept out for emergency situation and this all calls for a meticulous planning process if we don't want to sell our holdings at the wrong time.

As simple and basic as the concept of proper planning and implementation of how much we keep out as our emergency fund and when best to spend it his, it could make a whole difference in terms of how possible it is to keep our holding without touching or selling it until we meet our accumulation goal.