Table of Contents

Selling Price

The Selling Price is the actual price at which an asset, such as a stock, bond, or piece of real estate, is sold to a buyer. It represents the final, agreed-upon value in a transaction, marking the point where ownership officially changes hands. This is distinct from the ask price (the price a seller initially requests) or the bid price (the price a buyer offers). The selling price is the “handshake number” where supply meets demand, crystallizing the market's valuation of that asset at a specific moment. For investors, this figure is critically important because it’s the final number used to calculate the profitability of an investment. Subtracting your original purchase cost (the cost basis) from the selling price reveals your capital gain (the profit) or capital loss (the loss). Mastering the “when” and “why” behind your selling price is just as crucial as deciding what to buy in the first place.

The Art and Science of Selling

For a value investor, selling isn't a panicked reaction to a scary headline or a greedy attempt to catch a market top. It's the disciplined conclusion to a well-researched investment thesis. The old adage “Buy low, sell high” is the goal, but the “sell high” part is often the most emotionally challenging. The selling price you achieve is the ultimate test of your initial analysis and your patience. A successful sale isn't about getting the highest price possible in a stock's history; it's about selling when the price has significantly surpassed the company's underlying intrinsic value. It’s the moment you cash in on the market's eventual recognition of the value you identified long before everyone else did.

When to Sell? The Value Investor's Dilemma

Determining the right time to sell is one of the toughest decisions an investor faces. A value investor typically sells for rational, pre-determined reasons, not emotional whims. Here are the most common triggers:

Calculating Your Gain (or Pain)

Once you've sold, it's time to do the math. The selling price is the star of this calculation, but it doesn't tell the whole story on its own.

The Basic Formula

To determine your profit or loss, you use a simple formula:

Your Cost Basis is the total amount you paid for the investment. This includes the price of the shares themselves plus any commissions or fees associated with the purchase. For example, if you bought 100 shares at $48 each and paid a $10 commission, your cost basis is ($48 x 100) + $10 = $4,810. If you later sell all the shares for a total selling price of $7,000, your capital gain is $7,000 - $4,810 = $2,190.

Don't Forget Taxes!

Governments want a piece of your investment success. The profit you make is subject to capital gains tax. In both the United States and most European countries, the tax rate often depends on how long you held the asset.

This tax structure naturally rewards the patient, long-term approach favored by value investors.

Capipedia's Core Idea

The selling price is more than just a number; it's the final chapter of an investment story. For a value investor, a successful selling price isn't a fluke achieved by timing the market. It is the logical result of buying a great business at a sensible price and having the patience to wait for the market to agree with your assessment. The goal isn't to sell at the absolute peak—an impossible task—but to sell systematically when the price no longer offers value, freeing up your capital to find the next great bargain.