Kiplinger

5 Stocks to Sell or Avoid in 2020

Sometimes, it pays to fold 'em.

While many investors gear up for the new year by scouting out lists of the best stocks to buy, there's virtue in pruning, too. Even though it seems counterintuitive to sell into a rip-snorting bull market, you should parcel out time to evaluate your portfolio for stocks to sell as we enter 2020.

Why? Three reasons:

  • Too far, too fast. Let's say you own a stock that has soared far above the market. The position that once was 10% of your portfolio is now 35%. That's a lot to have riding on one stock. You don't have to sell your entire holding, but it might be a good idea to trim it back a bit. In fact, you can tie such a move into charitable giving and dodge that pesky capital-gains tax.
  • Slowdown ahead. Even if your stock has) and GameStop () - weren't able to keep the earnings momentum going. If it looks like your stock's growth might be slowing, you should think about where that money could be working a bit harder. Even great buys become stocks to sell at some point.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Kiplinger

Kiplinger4 min read
This New Sustainable ETF’s Pitch? Give Back Profits.
Feel like society and the environment are beginning to break down? There’s an ETF for that. Newday Impact’s Sustainable Development Goals ETF (SDGS) delivers a growth-oriented product that promotes dual impact, promising to advocate for environmental
Kiplinger3 min read
Cryptocurrency: Stay In? Get Out? How to Decide?
Warren Buffett is famous for saying “Only when the tide goes out do you discover who's been swimming naked.” If you invested in cybercoins, the news has not been good lately. Are you wearing your bathing suit?  What to do?  Is time to take your profi
Kiplinger4 min read
Got Crypto? The IRS Really Wants to Know
The 2022 crypto price crash understandably has some investors concerned. But for those of you who haven’t run for the hills, it’s worth knowing that cryptocurrency currently has the attention of not only the Biden administration, and Congress, but th

Related Books & Audiobooks