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for stocks of this kind, the investor may secure
quite as good a chance of a future rise in value
as lie may have in respect of his existing
holdings. Such a procedure might hinder the
immediate investment in stocks which are likely
to carry out the investor’s real investment aim ;
but it would tend to forthwith improve the
Geographical Distribution of his capital, and
this is, after all, a very great step in the right
direction. To wait for a future rise in any
security is speculation and not investment, and
whether the anticipated rise is to take place in
a security which is actually held or in one
which has just been purchased does not alter
the fact. To make investment and speculation
go hand in hand is not an easy matter, and it is
from this point of view that every delay in the
sale of unsuitable stocks should be considered.
In all cases where a stockbroker is consulted,
his ipse dixit on investment questions should
not be accepted as final, but he should rather
be asked to furnish good reasons for the
suggestions which he may make, and to
explain at the outset his Investment Scheme as
a comprehensive whole. This not only makes
for the greater enlightenment of the client, but
it also gives the latter an opportunity of testing
his adviser’s ability to handle the delicate
question of investment.