How to de-risk a concentrated stock position

A concentrated, low-basis position is one of the hardest problems in taxable wealth. Every way to de-risk it, scored on the tradeoffs that matter.

A single stock that dominates your net worth is one of the hardest problems in taxable wealth. Sell, and a low cost basis means a heavy tax bill. Hold, and you carry idiosyncratic risk the market never compensates you for bearing.

There is no clean answer, only tradeoffs. Every approach moves you along the same handful of axes: how much liquidity it frees, how quickly it cuts the risk, what it costs in fees and tax drag, how much you can tailor it, and how complex it is to run.

The strategies sort into five families. Sell outright or in stages. Harvest losses to fund a tax-neutral exit. Hedge the position with options or forwards. Defer the gain by diversifying in-kind. Or give the shares away, to family, a foundation, or charity.

The interactive guide below scores each strategy across those tradeoffs. Weight what matters to you, sort by any column, and tap a row to read how it works.

Too much of a good thing

Single asset risk

Strongest fit Strong fit Partial fit Weak fit Weakest fit Tap a column to sort · tap a row to read
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Basic orientation, not tax, legal, or investment advice. The scores are one analyst's read of typical tradeoffs, not your facts.