I don’t think enough people talk about how hard it is to sell when you’re actually up big on a position.
Everyone’s always focused on the entry. What’s the next 5x? What are you buying? But honestly, I’ve found the real challenge is knowing what to do once something you own starts ripping.
I’ve had this happen a few times now. I’d get in early on something, maybe just messing around with a small position, and then suddenly it’s up 200%, 300%, sometimes more. And I’d love to say I calmly trimmed, locked in profit, and moved on. But that’s not how it went.
Usually you start getting emotional. You feel smart. You tell yourself it’s going higher. You start thinking about what your gain could be if you just held a little longer. Sometimes you even add more. I’ve done that. Then it pulls back 40%, and now you’re stuck. Selling feels wrong. Holding feels worse. You just sit there watching it bleed.
One thing that’s helped me is trying to think of selling the same way I think about buying. When a position gets big and my portfolio value starts growing fast, I’ll stop and ask: “If I didn’t own this coin right now, would I be comfortable putting this amount of money into it at this current price and chart?”
Most of the time, the answer is no. That’s when I know I probably need to trim. I don’t want one name becoming way too outsized just because I’m emotionally tied to it. Rebalancing feels more like a risk management decision than some emotional call to dump the position. And honestly, it helps a lot.
Another thing is selling in chunks. I might trim a bit after a double. More if it keeps going. That way I’m locking something in but still giving it room to run. I try not to beat myself up if it goes higher after I sell. That’s just part of the game, hindsight is 20/20.
I’ve still made plenty of mistakes. I’ve round-tripped some great trades because I got greedy or froze. But I’m starting to learn that having some kind of exit mindset early on makes everything easier. Even just writing down a rough plan or price target helps take the edge off when it comes time to decide.
Anyway, just sharing my experience. If you’ve ever held too long, sold too early, or felt stuck on what to do when you’re up big, you’re definitely not the only one. Curious how other people think about this stuff too.
submitted by /u/10baggerss
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