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Robbie Burns
Robbie Burns's columns :
01/02/2005Share Imagination
19/01/20057 Deadly Stock Sins
10/01/2005Happy New Year
21/12/2004Stock Picks 2005
13/12/2004Suspended Shares
29/11/2004Share Teasers
12/11/2004spread-betting-secrets
03/11/2004Nervous Nineties Stocks
28/10/2004The Naked Trader Thread
25/10/2004UK Retail Stocks
15/10/2004New Stock Research Tools
08/10/2004Look at the Whole Picture
29/09/2004Vanco and Bullen Energy
13/09/2004Market Psychology
31/08/2004New Stock Issues
20/08/2004Trading Volume Codes
12/08/2004Dire Markets
04/08/2004Company Research Tools
27/07/2004House Prices and Covered Warrants
20/07/2004Rocky Stock Markets
13/07/2004Company Research
05/07/2004Recovery Plays

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Robbie Burns – The Naked Trader

Robbie has been trading full-time since 2001. His book "The Naked Trader" (which also has useful information on how to use advfn) has become one of the biggest-selling finance books, reaching the top 150 books on Amazon - order it here. Trades made for Robbie's website have amassed profits of more than £300,000. You can read about his buys and sells daily at www.nakedtrader.co.uk.


Terrorism and the Stock Markets

08/07/2005

What is the best thing for traders/investors to do in the event of a terrorist atrocity?

It's hard for newer investors to know what to do when they see all their stocks tumbling and when the human reflex is for flight: that is - sell everything. In fact, a quick look around ADVFN's bulletin boards showed that many did just that - sell up at any price.

Older hands, like me, who have been in this situation many times, do nothing. Of course, the City is supposed to be about dog eat dog. Many might feel that a panic tumble of stocks gives them an ideal chance to top up on favourite stocks at discount prices or indeed, perhaps try to make quick money by shorting.

My personal view (and it may be too moral for some) is that I don't want to make money from other people's misery. I did nothing - tempting though it might have been to pick up great stock at sudden markdowns.

Taking the moral standpoint aside, those trying to sell at a time of panic face a lot of problems. Market makers cut links to brokers, so online dealing becomes next to impossible. Spreads get widened and if you want to get out, you'll find the price offered could be even lower than seen on screen.

What you are, in effect, doing by panicking is probably making yourself a lot poorer. And if you want to buy back the stock that you sold in a panic, you'll probably have to buy back in at higher prices, and there's commission and stamp duty to pay.

My view is always this: think of Corporal Jones in Dad's Army… and don't do what he does, which is jump up and down and panic. Similarly, don't act like Private Fraser thinking we are all doomed. The human spirit is strong and we come out of adversity quickly.

As for me, my do nothing stance proved correct and, a day on from the bombs, most of my stocks are back to where they were before the panic, and some are even higher.

Let us hope there is never again another terrorist event. But if there is one, my advice is to switch off trading screens. Modern stock markets now appear to quickly discount terrorist activity.

My thoughts are with those families now having to deal with the horrific consequences of the bombs. Let us all, in our own way, take a little time out of our busy days and pray for them.

After all, it could have been any of us.


You can read Robbie’s daily market comments together with his latest buys and sells at his website www.nakedtrader.co.uk