By Stock Sharks
***
***
Peter Lynch’s Rules for When to Sell a Stock?
🧠 1. Sell when your original thesis is broken
Lynch was obsessed with the story behind a stock. If the story changes for the worse, that’s your cue.
Examples of a broken thesis:
- The company’s growth engine stops working
- Management loses credibility
- The competitive advantage disappears
- Debt balloons without a plan
- The product no longer resonates with customers
This aligns with the Stock Unlock summary noting that selling depends on whether the original category and thesis still hold.
📊 2. Sell if fundamentals deteriorate—not because the stock price drops
Lynch famously said price declines alone are meaningless. He only sold when the business weakened.
He warned against:
- Selling because the stock is “up too much”
- Selling because the market is volatile
- Selling because of macro fears
He emphasized that many investors sell winners too early and hold losers too long.
🚀 3. Sell slow growers when growth stalls
For “stalwarts” (big, steady companies), Lynch sold when:
- Earnings growth slowed
- The company became too expensive relative to its growth
This is echoed in the Envestreet Financial breakdown of selling stalwarts.
⚡ 4. Sell fast growers when growth slows sharply
Fast growers are Lynch’s favorite category—but also the most dangerous.
He sold when:
- Sales growth decelerated
- New store openings slowed
- A hot product cycle ended
- Competitors caught up
This is consistent with his six-category framework referenced in the Stock Unlock article.
🧮 5. Sell if the stock becomes absurdly overvalued
Lynch didn’t obsess over valuation, but he did sell when:
- The P/E ratio became disconnected from earnings growth
- The stock price assumed unrealistic future performance
He often used the PEG ratio as a sanity check.
🕰️ 6. Sell if you no longer understand the company
If the business becomes too complex or drifts outside your circle of competence, Lynch considered that a valid reason to exit.
🧘 7. Don’t sell just because the stock is up
Lynch repeatedly warned that many of his biggest winners rose 10x or more after he thought they were expensive.
He said the hardest part of investing is holding onto big winners.
🧭 Lynch’s Only “Bad” Reason to Sell
He criticized selling because of:
- Market predictions
- Fear of recessions
- Headlines
- Short-term volatility
He believed no one can time the market.
🧩 Quick Decision Table
| Situation | Lynch’s View | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Stock price drops | Not a reason to sell | Recheck fundamentals |
| Fundamentals weaken | Valid reason | Sell |
| Growth slows (fast grower) | Major red flag | Consider selling |
| Stock becomes too complex | Valid reason | Sell |
| Stock rises a lot | Not a reason | Hold if story intact |
| Market looks scary | Not a reason | Ignore |
COMMENTS APPRECIATED
SPEAKING: Dr. Marcinko will be speaking and lecturing, signing and opining, teaching and preaching, storming and performing at many locations throughout the USA this year! His tour of witty and serious pontifications may be scheduled on a planned or ad-hoc basis; for public or private meetings and gatherings; formally, informally, or over lunch or dinner. All medical societies, financial advisory firms or Broker-Dealers are encouraged to submit an RFP for speaking engagements: CONTACT: Ann Miller RN MHA at MarcinkoAdvisors@outlook.com -OR- http://www.MarcinkoAssociates.com
Like, Refer and Subscribe
***
***
Filed under: iMBA, Inc. | Tagged: david marcinko |















Leave a comment