Reader Asks Me A Question

by mapgirl on May 5, 2009

Reader Dave asks:
Why would you stop contributing to ESPP and not sell shares and lock in gains?

****
Some background, my ESPP balance is equivalent to about 10-12% of my total investment portfolio, so it’s at the maximum allocation it should be.

Dave makes the assumption that I have gains. His experience with ESPP’s is very different from my current company’s plan. I buy stock for a discount far less than his stated 10-15%. With market fluctuations, I really cannot say from day to day if I’m going to make money selling the stock. Depending on the whims of the market, I could actually lose money on an open-market sale right now and probably for the near future.

I would love to lock in some gains, but selling everything in the ESPP also means that I essentially get kicked out of the plan for a certain period of time. I’d rather just hold on and collect the dividends for now. Maybe if the stock rises another 5-10% I can think about selling for a gain, but the stock’s down some 40% since I first start participating last year, and an 8% discount price isn’t going to cover for that kind of loss in the near term.

I’d love to lock in some gains because that would mean I had some and I wouldn’t get penalized for selling off.

EDIT: I double checked my plan this week and I could sell off some of the shares for a gain (Since the market had quite a lift on Monday), and I would not be penalized for selling off shares from a prior period. (Shares are bought in cycles. I would be barred for selling shares acquired in the current buying cycle, so my statement up above is still true.)

I was thinking of using this money to pay for renovations as I convert to a rental. However, all things being equal, I could also hold the stock and do nothing because I would be selling during a period of short-term capital gains. (The gain to be had is about 10%, less taxes).

Related posts:

  1. Happy Stock Allocation I think I’m finally done messing with my stock portfolio...
  2. Cash Crunch In the short term I have a lot of cash...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post:

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes