Profit Harvest Zone
A winner enters the harvest zone when it has moved far enough, fast enough, or vertically enough that you should pay yourself without assuming the whole trend is finished.
A structured guide for selling a portion of profitable trades without deleting the winner from your attention, then buying back only when the asset resets into a controlled pullback, reclaim, or accumulation zone.
A winner enters the harvest zone when it has moved far enough, fast enough, or vertically enough that you should pay yourself without assuming the whole trend is finished.
After taking profit, the job is not to chase the asset back. The job is to let it pull back, calm down, prove support, then add only when the new risk point is clear.
The same sell rule should not govern a MEXC momentum test, an EP swing, a Turtle breakout and a long-term thematic hold. These cards give each one its own behaviour.
Best for episodic pivots, strong growth-stock pullbacks, and high-quality swing trades.
Best for fast coins where a big move can reverse before you have time to think clearly.
Best for trend-following trades where early profit-taking can damage the whole edge.
Best for Futurology-style names and stronger holdings where the reason for ownership is not just the short-term chart.
The label matters because a runner, a tracker and a fresh entry should not be managed the same way.
These are the fields that stop a sold winner from disappearing from attention.
| Field | Purpose | Useful values |
|---|---|---|
| Position role | Stops confusion about how the holding should be managed. | Starter, Full, Profit Taken, Runner, Tracker, Rebuild Candidate |
| Last trim price | Shows where profit was harvested. | Price sold, date sold, amount sold |
| Distance from trim | Shows whether the asset has declined enough to deserve attention again. | Current price vs last trim price |
| Add-back zone | Prevents random rebuying after regret. | Not yet, Watching, In zone, Triggered |
| Structure | Separates healthy pullbacks from broken charts. | Strong, Extended, Pulling Back, Rebuilding, Broken |
| Sell-all allowed? | Forces the question: is this broken or am I just taking profit? | No by default; Yes only if thesis/chart/scalp rule says so |
If the asset is still strong, keep a runner or tracker. If it pulls back constructively, let it become a rebuild candidate. If it breaks structure, sell it properly and record the lesson. The goal is not to guess tops; the goal is to harvest strength, preserve attention, and rebuild only when the risk is clean again.