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#1 |
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new member
aug/07 simulation winner
may/07 simulation winner weekly challenge winner 2x ![]() Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 19
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I have a lot of questions about this......so i'll just go ahead and list them all
1. What exactly does it mean to short a stock? 2. Why is it profitable to short sell when a stock price is going down? Where does the monetary gain you achieve from this action come from? 3. Is it possible to short any stock I want? 4. Is there limited upside and unlimited downside? 5. Is short selling anyway related to stock options? And more specifically buying puts? I often read on message boards how the shorts are bringing down the price of a stock. Is this possible? If so, how does this happen? Thx in advance |
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#2 | |
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forum leader
weekly challenge winner 13x
mar/07 simulation winner feb/07 simulation winner jan/07 simulation winner nov/06 simulation winner june/06 challenge winner april/06 challenge winner ![]() Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 5,328
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Quote:
2) You borrow 100 shares at 10$/share worth $1000 the price goes down to $9/share and you pay back the shares and pocket the $100 3)No, some are not available due to demand, and some are not shortable due to SEC regulations. 4) Upside is limited to the difference between your price and zero, downside is theoretically unlimited. 5) No, except in the sense that you profit from down moves in both cases. The way shorts bring down prices is somewhat complicated, but is related to overselling the stock. It would require a fair amount of space to really explain this. |
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#3 |
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forum leader
weekly challenge winner 2x
![]() Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 1,165
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extra points to aiki's fine response. i am sorry if its gibberish.
short sellers get more credit then they deserve. when you hear "the shorts are manipulating the price down" often i find the true case is a broken stock, or a broken company; an unsound investment. make no mistake that manipulation of price is a daily event. but the vast majority of any market bias is always to the upside. to be consistently profitable against a trend (a short seller) takes an extra amount of skill/ risk. it would follow the "pool" of these rarer individuals would be proportionately smaller. and the capital available to these players would also be smaller. add the difficulty mentioned in securing shares to borrow, and you can see how difficult it theoretically should be for shorts to keep the price down. as always, it becomes a case by case analysis, but when you see a half million shares hit the bid of a stock your in, its at best unlikely to be "the shorts manipulating the price down." best wishes. __________________ Smart people can't trade. God is for those who refuse responsibility. |
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#4 |
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valued contributor
july/06 simulation winner
may/06 simulation winner ![]() Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 794
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Shorts can artificially bring down the price of a stock by BORROWING shares they do not own, and selling them
Of course this is simply "selling on margin", the opposite of "buying on margin" In both cases, the trader is borrowing (money in one case, stock in the other) and making a bet on it |
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#5 | |
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forum leader
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Thousand Oaks, CA
Posts: 1,494
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Quote:
My question to Aiki, et alia is: If you believe the price of a stock will decline, what are the relative merits of shorting the stock as opposed to buying puts on the stock?I can see several mechanical differences, but it's hard for me to evaluate them. BTW: If you respond, "What differences do you see?" I'll take that as an assignment and report back. On the other hand, after reading your posts, you might be able to nail this in 25 words or less. TIA __________________ "The older I get, the better I was." --John McEnroe |
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#6 | |
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forum leader
weekly challenge winner 13x
mar/07 simulation winner feb/07 simulation winner jan/07 simulation winner nov/06 simulation winner june/06 challenge winner april/06 challenge winner ![]() Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 5,328
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Quote:
Due to leverage the put's will react to a move in the stock price with a larger move in their price on a percentage basis. If the stock price rises 1% the put may lose 5 or 10%, and a 10% move up may result in a total loss on the puts. Additionally there is no expiry on the short position so you don't have time value concerns. This particular scenario is difficult to calculate on a risk/reward basis since there is limited risk on the short, time value on the puts, and the lack of delta (the amount of price change of the option compared to the stock) on in the money puts. In general (9 times out of 10) I will take a short stock position rather than straight puts. I use put's mainly to protect long stock positions, or in straddles. If however you can get a good value on way out of the money puts then you can get a ton of delta if the stock tanks. If you have a good idea that will happen you will get paid off in the puts. More than 25 words, I hope helpful. |
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#7 | |
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forum leader
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Thousand Oaks, CA
Posts: 1,494
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Quote:
I'm tempted to take Aiki's response as a head start and develop a decision matrix based on it. I say "tempted" because, as a former planner, I'm much better at thinking up work that could be done than I am at actually doing it. Well, let's see how the time goes over the next week or so. |
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#8 |
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new member
![]() Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Richmond, VA
Posts: 13
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Good post.. OP, just remember, this is a ZERO SUM game! If you buy something, someone had to sell it to you.. .If you gain $10K, somewhere, 10K is lost...
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#9 | |
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forum leader
![]() Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Thousand Oaks, CA
Posts: 1,494
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Quote:
A natural gas producer may hedge with a 'costless collar' on the product — selling a 'call' to set a max price while buying a 'put' to ensure a minimum price. For the natural gas producer, the collar itself was a win. It is totally irrelevant that someone may make (or lose) money on the call or put. Note: There is a time factor that applies here. The hedger is concerned with assuring a profit at some date in the future. The put and call traders have their own game going, and that might, indeed, be zero-sum. Similarly, this is how covered call investors work in the options market. For the covered call investor, the underlying security is the "commodity" they are hedging. Do they "win" the [zero-sum] game by selling the calls? That's the wrong question. They are hedging their long position on the [stock/commodity]. Depending on investment objectives, an 'assured' profit may be preferred to a 'max' profit. |
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#10 |
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forum leader
weekly challenge winner 2x
![]() Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 1,165
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looks like i missed some fun here, thanks for digging this up net.
bman- shorts can not artificially bring down the price of a stock. strategic ftds are a seperate case, but really the downward manipulation of a stock price is generated on the buy side. or more simply, if an excessive supply of a security is offered at less then the "current market range" too many market participants will find the easy profit, eliminating any advantage sought. ticktrader- a zero sum game applies only to futures and options. i would argue those to be less then zero sum games considering commisions and fees. a decent, simple explination found in myth #1 http://www.investopedia.com/articles/02/061902.asp |
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