Should Investors Sell Stocks to Buy More Stocks? | The Motley Fool (2024)

As stocks across all industries are trading down, how do investors decide when and where to sell their holdings to generate some extra investing capital right now? In this segment of Backstage Pass, recorded on Dec. 1, Fool contributors Brian Withers, Rachel Warren, and Brian Feroldi respond to a member's question.

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Brian Withers: How do you decide which winner to trim to raise cash today? David Gardner talks about trimming the weeds and watering the flowers. I don't know if you want to trim your winners to raise some cash. And you never want to be a desperate seller. Either of you have some thoughts on that one?

Brian Feroldi: Rachel, you can go first.

Rachel Warren: OK, yeah, I was thinking about this. Of all the stocks in my portfolio right now. I was very -- I studied the stock market a long time before I got into it, and I really like the companies. Not all of them are performing as I would love right now. I own a lot of growth stocks. That's definitely part of the reason behind that.

For me personally, I can't see myself trimming many of my current holdings to generate cash. One thing I do often is reinvest my dividends. That could be a great way to get a little extra capital for investing. I always try to set aside some cash regularly, just particularly for the sake of investing so that I can continue to stay invested in the stocks I love and add to new ones.

Brian Feroldi: Brian Withers is like: "What's a dividend? I don't have any of those. [Laughter] I only buy companies that lose money."[Laughter]

Brian Withers: Exactly. It's got to have a negative bottom line, come on. [Laughter]

Rachel Warren: Oh, man.

Brian Withers: Jeff Reuben asks, we'll finish up with this one, "Would you buy and average down from here?"

I guess I look at that as: If you are working and you're saving money, you're living below your means, meaning you have some money at the end of every month, you should be continually investing and taking advantage of the dollar-cost averaging into the market over time.

I don't know that. You always want to buy the strongest companies. If the stock is down doesn't necessarily mean that it's a great buy. And so you want to make sure that you look at that.

Brian Feroldi: Yeah. To answer the question before, though, more seriously, I look at the companies that I hold, and I always ask myself: "Is the thesis on track? Is the reason that I bought this company still in track?"

By the way, it's really easy to fool yourself into thinking the answer is yes when the actual answer is no. For example, I'm wrestling with that with Zillow right now. Yes, the thesis is still on track even though they torched the one high-growth part of the business.

But I would look at that.

You want to cull the losing businesses or the mediocre businesses from your portfolio, not the stocks themselves. Like Zoom for example, if you just look at Zoom's stock price over the last year, you're like: terrible, terrible company It's down 70% from its high. But which number that we just got over there was bad? Was there one? [laughs]

Brian Withers: Yeah. I don't think there was.

Brian Feroldi: This is why investing is hard. [laughs]

Brian Withers: Exactly.

Brian Feroldi: It has to be hard. If it was easy, everybody would do it.

Brian Feroldi owns Zillow Group (A shares), Zillow Group (C shares), and Zoom Video Communications. Brian Withers owns Zoom Video Communications. Rachel Warren owns Zoom Video Communications. The Motley Fool owns and recommends Zillow Group (A shares), Zillow Group (C shares), and Zoom Video Communications. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Should Investors Sell Stocks to Buy More Stocks? | The Motley Fool (2024)

FAQs

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Does the Motley Fool tell you when to sell? Yes, in the rare instance the Motley Fool team believes you should sell a previous recommendation, they will issue a Sell alert.

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The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends Intel and recommends the following options: long January 2023 $57.50 calls on Intel, long January 2025 $45 calls on Intel, and short May 2024 $47 calls on Intel. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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There are no set ages to get into or to get out of the stock market. While older clients may want to reduce their investing risk as they age, this doesn't necessarily mean they should be totally out of the stock market.

When should an investor sell their stock? ›

Change in Fundamentals

Sometimes investors may need to sell a stock when the company's fundamentals change for the worse. For example, investors may begin unwinding their position if a company's quarterly earnings have been steadily decreasing or performing poorly compared to its industry peers.

What is The Motley Fool's top ten stocks in 2024? ›

See the 10 stocks

The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Chewy, Fiverr International, Fortinet, Nvidia, PayPal, Salesforce, and Uber Technologies. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: short March 2024 $67.50 calls on PayPal.

What stock has the most potential to grow in 2024? ›

10 Best Growth Stocks to Buy for 2024
StockExpected Change in Stock Price*
Nvidia Corp. (ticker: NVDA)6.1%
Alphabet Inc. (GOOG, GOOGL)10.1%
Meta Platforms Inc. (META)-1.9%
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)-3.4%
6 more rows
Mar 25, 2024

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