Knowing When to Sell Is One of the Hardest Investing Decisions
Buying a good stock is difficult. Knowing when to sell it is often even harder.
Most investors struggle with selling decisions because emotions tend to dominate the process. When stock prices rise sharply, greed and overconfidence may encourage investors to hold on indefinitely expecting even higher prices. On the other hand, when prices fall below the purchase price, fear often pushes investors toward impulsive selling.
Successful investing requires preventing emotions from driving portfolio decisions. This makes having a disciplined selling framework extremely important.
At MoneyWorks4Me, investment decisions are anchored around the MRP — the estimated Fair Price of a stock. Stocks are generally accumulated below MRP with a Margin of Safety (MOS) to reduce downside risk and improve long-term return potential.
However, investing environments constantly evolve. Changes in businesses, industries, economic cycles, and market sentiment can all impact future return potential. As a result, investors need clear principles for deciding when to reduce or exit a position.
Guiding Principle 1: When the Business Quality Deteriorates
One of the strongest reasons to sell a stock is when the company no longer appears to be the fundamentally strong business it was originally believed to be.
Investment decisions should always remain anchored to business quality and underlying data. If new information suggests weakening fundamentals, deteriorating management quality, structural industry changes, or declining competitive strength, investors should reassess their conviction objectively.
In such situations, ignoring new evidence simply because of emotional attachment to the stock can become costly.
At times, this may even require exiting at a loss. However, preserving long-term capital is often more important than avoiding short-term discomfort.
Guiding Principle 2: When Valuations Become Excessively Expensive
Another important reason to consider selling is when the stock price rises significantly above its estimated fair value.
Over long periods, stock prices tend to align with business fundamentals. When prices rise much faster than the company’s actual earnings and growth potential, future returns may become less attractive despite the business itself remaining strong.
Holding excessively overvalued stocks can expose investors to:
- Lower future return potential
- Sharp valuation corrections
- Increased portfolio concentration risk
In such situations, it may become prudent to gradually book profits and reallocate capital toward opportunities offering better risk-adjusted return potential.
MoneyWorks4me assesses the Premium over the Fair Price to recommend sensible sell decisions

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