What Is Short Selling?

What Is Short Selling?

Short selling is an investment or trading strategy that speculates on the decline in a?stock?or other?security’s price. It is an advanced strategy that should only be undertaken by experienced traders and investors.

Traders may use short selling as?speculation, and investors or portfolio managers may use it as a?hedge?against the?downside risk?of a long position in the same security or a related one. Speculation carries the possibility of substantial?risk?and is an advanced trading method. Hedging is a more common transaction involving placing an offsetting position to reduce risk exposure.

In short selling, a position is opened by borrowing shares of a stock or other asset that the investor believes will decrease in value. The investor then sells these borrowed shares to buyers willing to pay the market price. Before the borrowed shares must be returned, the trader is betting that the price will continue to decline and they can purchase the shares at a lower cost. The risk of loss on a short sale is theoretically unlimited since the price of any asset can climb to infinity.



Understanding Short Selling

With short selling, a seller opens a short position by borrowing shares, usually from a?broker-dealer, hoping to buy them back for a?profit if the price declines. Shares must be borrowed because you cannot sell shares that do not exist. To close a short position, a trader buys the shares back on the market—hopefully at a price less than at which they borrowed the asset—and returns them to the lender or broker. Traders must account for any?interest?charged by the broker or?commissions?charged on trades.

To open a short position, a trader must have a?margin account?and will usually have to pay interest on the value of the borrowed shares while the position is open. Also, the?Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), which enforces the rules and regulations governing registered brokers and?broker-dealer?firms in the United States, the?New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), and the?Federal Reserve?have set minimum values for the amount that the margin account must maintain—known as the?maintenance margin.1

?If an investor’s account value falls below the maintenance margin, more funds are required, or the position might be sold by the broker.

The process of locating shares that can be borrowed and returning them at the end of the trade is handled behind the scenes by the broker. Opening and closing the trade can be made through the regular trading platforms with most brokers. However, each broker will have qualifications that the trading account must meet before they allow margin trading.

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