The broader market has made holding winners feel both obvious and uncomfortable.
On one hand, the trend is there. S&P and Nasdaq had a strong quarter, chip stocks are still attracting capital, and a lot of pullbacks in quality names are getting bought faster than expected. If you only look at the higher timeframe, the answer seems simple: don’t overtrade, don’t short strength, don’t sell too early.
Then you sit in a real position and it becomes less simple.
I trimmed a swing too early recently because the stock was extended and the market felt crowded. The decision was defensible. The result was still annoying. Price kept grinding higher without giving the clean pullback I wanted.
That’s been the main lesson for me in this tape: extension alone is not an exit signal. A trend can stay stretched if liquidity keeps rotating into the same group. What matters more is whether the pullbacks start changing character.
I’m trying to separate profit protection from fear of giving back gains. They look similar in the moment, but they lead to very different decisions.
My current approach is to reduce less on strength and pay more attention to how price behaves after the first real dip. I won’t write the whole framework here, but the difference between a normal pullback and early distribution is where most swing traders seem to get shaken out.