
📊 Day 3|Should a newbie buy stocks immediately after entering the stock market?

We talked about this a couple of days ago:
✅ Stocks are essentially buying a company
✅ Stock prices are driven by sentiment in the short term, and by the company in the long term
If you've read it carefully, you're already a bit better than many beginners.
Today, let's talk about a very practical question:
👉 Should you buy stocks immediately after entering the market?
My answer is straightforward:
👉 You can buy, but don't rush to go all in.
The most common mistakes beginners make at the start:
❌ Buying directly based on someone else's recommendation
❌ Chasing the price after it goes up
❌ Putting all your money in at once
The result is often:
Panic selling at the first dip, unable to hold;
Selling at the first rise, unable to profit.
🧠 Why does this happen?
Because you haven't developed your own judgment logic yet.
You don't know:
Why you're buying it;
What kind of company you're buying;
When to hold on, and when to sell.
So when the price fluctuates, you get swayed by emotions.
📌 The right way for beginners to enter the market (very practical)
If you really want to start participating in the market, you can follow these 3 steps:
1️⃣ Start with "small capital" to test the waters
Don't invest too much at the beginning.
First, use an amount of money you can completely afford to see fluctuate.
The goal is not to make money, but to:
👉 Feel the market volatility
👉 Train your mindset
👉 Build trading awareness
2️⃣ First, buy companies you "understand"
For example:
Apple
Microsoft
Clear business, stable profits, easy to understand.
Not chasing hot trends or meme stocks right away.
3️⃣ Ask yourself 3 questions before buying
What does this company do?
How does it make money?
Why am I buying it?
If you can't answer these 3 questions:
👉 It's better not to buy for now.
📌 A quote from Warren Buffett is well worth remembering for beginners:
From Warren Buffett:
"Rule No.1: Never lose money. Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1."
Many people misunderstand it as "no losses allowed."
What it really means is:
Control risk first, then consider returns.
#USStocks
#StockMarketBasics
#BeginnerInvestor
#InvestmentMindset
#ValueInvesting
#LearnInvestingFromScratch
The copyright of this article belongs to the original author/organization.
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not reflect the stance of the platform. The content is intended for investment reference purposes only and shall not be considered as investment advice. Please contact us if you have any questions or suggestions regarding the content services provided by the platform.

