While any specific thoughts on the individual stock (CENX/Century Aluminum) are welcome, I'm also/more broadly interested in how folks handle your unexpected wins that wildly exceed your expectations especially in the realm of small caps where you readily realize you just got lucky.
FWIW, my brokerage account I used for individual stock picks is a pretty tiny portion of my overall portfolio -- I am no pro, nor any kind of day trader and mostly, I stick with large/mega caps. Still, I always told myself "If you can't keep pace with the S&P, you've just got an expensive hobby". Over 6 years now - I've held my own or better, thanks largely to getting in early on NVDA and standard stalwarts like AMZN and AAPL.
Anyway, I don't usually bother with small caps - but \~3 years ago, I read an interesting article in Kiplinger about potential under the radar beneficiaries of the 2021/2022 infrastructure/manufacturing bills. CENX was one of the names mentioned. I read more - they had some aggressive expansion plans, including some new tech/methods. I did - as I always try to do - pored over the 10-K/10-Qs and thought the finances looked solid. Bought in further in 2024 - quite clear no matter who won the election, such public investment wasn't going away.
I wouldn't ask this sort of question about large caps, but small caps... oy. Not a charts guy, but short% creeping towards 20%. CENX missed earnings throughout 2025, but still had an unbelievable year price-wise. Sector averages on P/E, now even growth? Don't look good. And worst of all? "Materials" is just not a sector I'm familiar with.
My *gut* \- every ounce of it - says take the money and run... I'm now, total cash basis - up nearly 500%, long on all positions. What was really a pretty small total investment has suddenly become real money.
However, my gut isn't always very smart. And I'm really just a "buy-and-hold" guy. AND - as the title says, I believe in "cut your weeds, not your flowers".
Like I said, any specific thoughts on it are welcome -- but more broadly, ***especially*** from more seasoned investors.
How and when do you decide that even your "winners" have exceeded expectations and you start to wonder whether its time to take the profits and reallocate to "safer" investments? Or - do you not? Even crashing out - the position here wouldn't hurt me in the grand scheme.