buy low, sell high
English
Proverb
- (business, finance) Commonplace investment advice, recommending that a prospective investor purchase an asset at a low cost and sell it later for a high price.
- 1979 March 26, Gerald Clarke, "Books: Man Behind The Tube," Time (retrieved 5 Oct 2015):
- [T]he art of broadcasting, writes William Paley, "is to know what the public is seeking before the public even knows it is looking for something else." As a guide, that advice is about as useful as buy low, sell high.
- 2006 Dec. 11, John P. Reese, "Buying High, Selling Higher," Forbes (retrieved 5 Oct 2015):
- The old investment adage “buy low, sell high” makes perfect intuitive sense, but folks like William O’Neil would prefer to “buy high and sell higher.”
- 2011 May 14, Jennifer Hill, "The 10 biggest investment pitfalls (and how to avoid them)," Independent (UK) (retrieved 5 Oct 2015):
- Any savvy investor knows the basic principle of investment: buy low, sell high.
- 1979 March 26, Gerald Clarke, "Books: Man Behind The Tube," Time (retrieved 5 Oct 2015):
Usage notes
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.