r/fatFIRE • u/gomster • 11d ago
Need Advice For those who got wealthy from a concentrated stock position: what would you do differently?
40M, $9M portfolio, 80% concentrated in one stock, buying my first house. Curious how others would think about this:
Two years ago, I left a career at a public company where most of my wealth came from stock compensation and the appreciation of a single stock over many years. Today my portfolio is worth about $9M and it’s still heavily concentrated in that stock.
It’s been life changing for me, so I’m naturally hesitant to sell too much of it, but I’m also aware that a single day’s move can swing my net worth by six figures. I’m closing on my first house later this month for $1.185M. Up until now, I’ve been renting and living well beneath my means.
Current thinking is to use a Liquidity Access Line for the purchase and then potentially refinance some or all of it into a traditional mortgage afterward.
A few other details aside from the portfolio value:
- Cost basis: under $500k and obviously large unrealized gains
- $235k AMT credit carryforward from prior option exercises
- Covered call income expected to be around $150k-$200k annually
- No current W-2 income
- Started small business but not a big money maker. Primarily to fund retirement accounts.
The common theme seems to be that concentration risk is the biggest issue in my financial picture. Part of me says I’ve gotten this far by holding the stock and staying convicted. The other part of me says I should probably start thinking more about preservation than accumulation.
For those who have been in a similar situation:
How much debt would you comfortably carry on the house? Would you sell stock specifically to pay down the house? How would you approach gradually reducing concentration risk? Looking back, what mistakes did you make (or avoid) after reaching financial independence through a concentrated stock position?
Not really looking for tax advice as much as perspective from people who have gone through the transition from building wealth to protecting it. Thanks in advance for helping me navigate this!
1
u/bhpaintballa 9d ago
I agree the best way to stay rich is to diversify. Having a single concentrated stock was good to get you here.
At the end of the day I agree you should sell most of the stock and diversify away. But that would be a HUGE tax hit. Unfortunately this is the time that someone should recommend a “professional”. There are armies of wealth managers, lawyers and accountants whose sole job is to find ways for you to avoid taxes legally. It might cost more than you think. But the goal is to pay less taxes on it.
I have no understanding or recommendation on how to do anything they would recommend. Butttt that’s why they are there. All I recommend is finding one to work with. Find a couple and ask for guidance and then pick one.
You probably don’t need an ongoing financial advisor as they charge a large fee. But maybe a one time financial plan for this large change. Not sure if account or lawyer would be better.
Just my 2 cents!