buy the dip
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Referring to the "dip" (fall) in a stock's market value, which allows an investor to purchase its shares at a cheaper price and possibly earn better gains if the stock rebounds to its previous high.
Verb
[edit]buy the dip (third-person singular simple present buys the dip, present participle buying the dip, simple past and past participle bought the dip)
- (slang, finance) To purchase a financial asset after its market value drops.
- 2009, Thomas H. Kee, Buy and Hold Is Dead: How to Make Money and Control Risk in Any Market, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 35:
- During upward-sloping cycles in the Investment Rate, a long bias with proper diversification should result in positive portfolio returns, without drawn-out setbacks, if investors are willing to buy the dips, especially the big ones, at all times.