How much profit is enough profit, before you start to sell your stocks or funds?
Greg Eckel, portfolio manager of Canadian General Investments, started investing in the semiconductor chipmaker Nvidia in 2016 when shares were around $1.35.
The price grew steadily as the business grew, but the company really got the market’s attention in May 2023, when shares hit $131 after a surprise set of positive financial results. While Eckel trimmed his stake by selling some shares, he remained invested in the firm. Today it is the second largest holding in his investment trust.
“Had we sold out then, we would have made a healthy return,” says Eckel. “But we’d have missed the stock’s subsequent rise to new highs of around $185 – a further gain of about 40 per cent.”
All investors dream of having such a stock in their portfolio, but what to do after such a strong run of performance can be a difficult dilemma.
Some people might be tempted to take their profits and run after a share price surge, to lock in those juicy gains – but what if it continues to rise and they miss out on more? Others might keep those shares in hope that the streak will continue – but what if it doesn’t, and those hard-won gains are lost?
Investors essentially have four choices when a stock has soared: sell out entirely, trim the holding, stay put, or invest more. But working out which is the best course of action is not always easy.
A first step is to understand why the investment has soared. Global stock markets have been on a strong run in 2025, and the FTSE 100 has hit multiple record highs. But selling just because prices are high is often not a good idea, says Rob Morgan, chief investment analyst at Charles Stanley.
The stock market has been at an all-time high in 363 of the 1,187 months since 1926, according to research by Schroders – 31 per cent of the time. Its research found that those who sold out of the market for a month whenever the market hit a new high, and reinvested when it wasn’t at one, reduced their total returns by a massive 90 per cent.
If the company has posted better-than-expected results, created a new market-leading product, or made a merger or acquisition that stands to benefit the business, then a share price rise is likely justified. This is what has happened with the likes of Nvidia, Tesla or the pharma firm Novo Nordisk as weight loss jabs became mainstream.
“Compare its performance to sector peers and the broader market to see if the rally is company-specific or part of a wider trend,” says Morgan.
On the other hand, sometimes stocks really do rise for no good reason. This is what has happened with so-called meme stocks, which get hyped up on platforms such as Reddit and TikTok, causing the share price to briefly soar before plunging again.