![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Investors usually play the market hoping that the financial instruments
(in our case stocks) they purchase will go up in price. This concept in the Wall Street jargon is called going long. Of course, there is an old practice of making bets against what most investors hope for. This practice is known as shorting, and theoretically, it can produce unlimited losses, as will be demonstrated in the following examples. The best scenario: You borrow a stock from your broker that is currently valued at $10 per share, believing its price is outrageously high and absurd. You then sell this borrowed stock on the open market and collect your $10 minus the commission. You hope this stock will go down in price, and your dream comes true. Let’s say that within 6 months the company declares bankruptcy, and you purchase the stock back for pennies. Literally and happily, you give it back to your broker, who lent you that stock when it was riding high at $10. When all is said and done, you have managed to make almost 100 percent profit minus commission. Let’s estimate that at 95 percent, which is not bad for a 6-month return. After this triumph, you feel smart and go hunting for the next overpriced stock, which brings us to our next point. The worst scenario: You borrow a stock priced at $10, believing it to be overvalued. You then sell this stock on the open market and collect your $10 minus commission. Now you wait for your stock to drop in price. Only this time your dream crumbles. Within the next 6 months, the company declares record earnings (perhaps they have found a cure for cancer) and the stock soars. To safeguard yourself from the unlimited potential loss, you purchase this stock back for $100, at ten times what you have paid for it, and reluctantly give it back to your broker. In the end you lose 900 percent plus commission. These are dreadful numbers for only 6 months of activity. Indubitably, these two examples are extreme, but they are educational nonetheless. When you short stocks, you expose yourself to a possible loss of astronomic proportions. |
![]() |
| Tags |
| forex, guidance, invstment, stocks, tips |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|