Identifying stock catalysts and why you should recycle your weakest positions

Every stock needs a catalyst to send them to the moon — which comes in various forms:
Other catalysts include product launches, regulations, economic policy changes and consumer behavior changes.
The earlier you identify these catalysts and the greater their impact, the higher your returns. But these catalysts have their own risks:
It takes time for catalysts to play out if there are any at all — in which case, sitting on these companies could hurt returns.
More than one way to invest: Investors are often told to invest and hold for the long term. But Harris Kupperman, Founder of Praetorian Capital, has a different philosophy.
He identifies himself as an inflection investor — catching the point when the company is about to take off. His advice, recycle your capital:
Every few months, he’ll purge the weakest portfolio positions. And sometimes, even long-term buy and hold investors can benefit from recycling their positions into the best opportunities.