Mark T Bird
Publish date: Sat, 24 Mar 2018, 10:02 AM
MY BEST INVESTMENTS ARE MY AWESOME FRIENDS!
WHAT IT IS:
Short selling is a trading strategy that seeks to capitalize on an anticipated decline in the price of a security. Essentially, a short seller is trying to sell high and buy low.
 
HOW IT WORKS (EXAMPLE):
Short selling involves a three-step process.
 
1) Borrow shares of the security, typically from a broker.
 
2) Sell the shares immediately at the market price.
 
3) Repurchase the shares (hopefully at a lower price) and return them to whoever you borrowed them from. After all this, you will pocket the difference if the share price has fallen, but will have lost money if the price went up.
 
We'll illustrate the process with an example:
 
Mr. Johnson believes that the stock of ABC Corp. will fall in the future. He calls his broker and asks him to find 100 shares of ABC that he (Mr. Johnson) can borrow for a short sale. ABC's current price is $25 per share. Mr. Johnson receives a cash inflow of $2,500 after he sells the shares he has borrowed.
 
Two weeks later, the price has indeed dropped, and shares of ABC now trade for $20 each.  Mr. Johnson buys back the shares (known as covering his short position) for $20 each. He spends $2,000 to repurchase the shares and returns the shares to the person he borrowed them from.
 
Mr. Johnson's profit on the trade is $500 ($2,500 received from the sale of the stock minus $2,000 paid to repurchase the stock).
 
Using this same calculation, we see that if the shares had risen to $27 during his holding period, then he would have lost $200 ($2,500 received from the sale of the stock minus $2,700 paid to repurchase the stock).
 
WHY IT MATTERS:
Short selling is a way for investors to benefit from a decline in a stock's price. The market always needs people on both the long end (owners/buyers) and the short end (renters/sellers) for it to work properly.
 
Short selling is controversial because when a large number of investors decide to short a particular stock, their collective actions can have a dramatic impact on the company's share price. Many companies will blame short sellers for sharp declines in their stock. Bans on short selling have been enacted on several occasions. During the most recent credit crisis,  investors were banned from selling short certain banks and financial institutions.
 
Short selling is risky for a number of reasons. First, an investor is exposed to theoretically unlimited losses if the underlying stock rises instead of falls.
 
Second, a sharp rise in a particular stock can trigger a large number of short sellers to cover their positions all at once. Short covering can push share prices even higher, causing even more short sellers to cover their positions, and so on. In this case, the stock is caught in a "short squeeze." Volatile stocks with large short interest are particularly susceptible to this phenomenon, and prospective short sellers should be wary of it.
 
An investor can quickly determine the percentage of a company's outstanding shares that are currently being sold short by checking the stock's "short interest." For example, a 10% short interest means that one of every ten outstanding shares is held short.
 
 
source InvestingAnswers
 
 
Discussions
2 people like this. Showing 19 of 19 comments

Ratna NinjaGal

short selling by the syndicates

2018-03-24 10:12

contrarian

In current bear market short sellers are winner bec most counters down. Nestle is exception.

2018-03-24 10:37

Cik Babe

Kalau semua kaki short term, X ada lagi kaki long term. Tidakkah ini akan effect public shareholding spread of the listed companies and face suspension/delisted

2018-03-24 10:51

Mark T Bird

If I'm not mistake, when a stock is delisted, short positions are not necessarily closed immediately. Short sellers are exposed to the risk of an indefinite, high-interest stock loan until shares are cancelled.

2018-03-24 10:58

Cik Babe

Kuasa ditangan SC. SC kena pantau. Kalau asyik terkena, ku pun X nak main stocks direct, lebih baik labur dalam amanah saham, with big money big power huhuhu

2018-03-24 11:10

Cik Babe

dari dimakan jerung lebih baik aku bayar small fee kat Fund Manager seperti Public Mutual huhuhu

2018-03-24 11:15

Mark T Bird

This is where things get problematic.

2018-03-24 11:20

Mark T Bird

this is the club not the house

2018-03-24 11:22

Cik Babe

ayam cari reban

2018-03-24 11:24

Patron

need to ask Cipet teh come and discuss this. He is an expert in short selling. bull market he short bear market he also short.

2018-03-24 12:10

Mark T Bird

Please come over.

2018-03-24 14:17

miker

Nor all investors are permitted to short by their broker.

2018-03-24 14:22

miker

It is very bad for illiquid counters/markets. Sekali satu olang atau sindiket short sell, terus junam itu counter.

2018-03-24 14:26

TESSA

Regulated short selling of prescribed stocks had previously been permitted by the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange. As a result of the Asian Financial Crisis, regulated short selling ("RSS") and Securities Borrowing and Lending ("SBL") were banned from 5 September 1997. The ban on RSS was lifted in March 2006 on condition that Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("the Exchange") controls all short selling transactions.

2018-03-24 15:04

Mark T Bird

Agree. Short-selling is not a simple thing. Plus now they have a lot of rules and restriction on short-selling.

2018-03-24 15:17

Cik Babe

Hanya orang kaya boleh meminjam, bagaimana pelabur runcit boleh meminjam?

2018-03-24 15:44

i3gambler

I think the cost of borrowing the shares is not going to be cheap in Malaysia.

2018-03-24 16:43

i3gambler

The example given is short sell at 25 and buy back at 20, I think such case is rare, may be normally the difference / gross profit will be around a few percent only, there won't be much net profit after deducting trading cost and the additional borrowing cost.

2018-03-24 16:47

Cik Babe

i3gambler, ty for sharing your thoughts!

2018-03-24 18:41

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