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Trends & Analysis
News

Gold edges higher as Iran, Israel halt attacks

News

Oil surges over 3% on elevated Middle East tensions

News

Broadcom stock tanks 13% despite record Q2

News

Gold prices rise on easing Middle East tensions

News

Japan’s Nikkei 225 hits record high

News

HPE stock jumps 28% on Q2 beat, boom in AI business

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Short-selling definition

Short-selling is a trading strategy that investors use when they believe a particular asset’s price will decline in the future. In short-selling, the investor borrows the asset from someone else (usually a broker), and they sell it at the current market price in hopes of buying it back at a lower price at a later date, so they can return the borrowed asset to the lender.

Investors who participate in short-selling are called short-sellers. They aim to make a profit from the difference between the selling price and the buying price.

 

An example of short-selling

An investor who believes that the stock price of Company ABC will decrease in the coming weeks. They borrow 100 shares of Company ABC from a broker and sell them on the stock exchange for $50 per share, making $5,000 in total.

A few weeks later, the stock price of Company ABC drops to $45 per share. The investor then buys back the 100 shares at this lower price for $4,500 and returns the borrowed shares to the broker. In this scenario, their profit is the difference between the selling price ($5,000) and the buying price ($4,500), which is $500. However, if the stock price had increased instead of decreased, the investor would have occurred a loss.

 

Advantages of short-selling

Firstly, investors who participate in short-selling are able to find opportunities even in the midst of a market downturn. This is because this trading strategy generates profits when an asset depreciates.

Short-selling can also be used as a hedge against other investments. For example, an investor who has a long position in stock they are worried will depreciate can short-sell the same stock to offset potential losses.

 

Limitations of short-selling

Short-selling is considered a high-risk investment strategy. This is because when an investor buys an asset, their maximum loss is limited to the amount they invest. However, when an investor short-sells an asset, they run the risk of unlimited potential losses. While the lowest an asset price can reach is $0, there is no limit to how high its price can climb.

If an asset price keeps rising, the short-seller will be forced to buy back the shares at a much higher price than they would have sold them for, resulting in substantial losses.

 

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