Definition / Meaning of Short selling
Short selling, often called shorting, is an investment strategy where a trader borrows shares of a stock and sells them on the open market, hoping to buy them back later at a lower price to return to the lender. The profit is the difference between the sale price and the repurchase price (minus any fees). It is a bet that the price of a security will decline.
How Short Selling Works in Practice
To execute a short sale, an investor typically needs a margin account with their broker. The process involves these steps:
- Borrow the shares: The broker lends shares from their own inventory, from another client’s margin account, or from another brokerage firm.
- Sell the borrowed shares: The short seller immediately sells those borrowed shares on the open market at the current market price. The proceeds from the sale are credited to the seller’s margin account.
- Wait for the price to fall: The investor monitors the stock, hoping its price will decline.
- Buy to cover: The investor buys the same number of shares at the lower price (this is known as covering the short).
- Return the shares: The broker returns the purchased shares to the entity from which they were originally borrowed.
If the price goes down as expected, the investor profits. If the price goes up instead, the investor faces a loss.
Key Risks of Short Selling
Short selling is considerably riskier than buying stock (going long). The primary reason is the asymmetry of potential returns:
- Unlimited Loss Potential: When you buy a stock, your maximum loss is the amount you invested (the stock can only drop to $0). With short selling, the theoretical loss is unlimited because a stock’s price can rise indefinitely. There is no cap on how high a share price may climb.
- Margin Calls: Because of the high risk, brokers require short sellers to maintain a minimum amount of equity in their margin account (a maintenance requirement). If the stock price rises significantly, the broker may issue a margin call, demanding that the investor deposit more cash or securities. If the investor cannot meet the call, the broker will forcibly close the short position at a loss.
- Short Squeeze: A short squeeze occurs when a heavily shorted stock’s price rises sharply. Short sellers rush to buy shares to cover their positions, which drives the price even higher, creating a feedback loop that can cause massive losses.
- Buy-ins: If the lender of the shares wants them back, the broker may force the short seller to return the shares (a buy-in), often at an unfavorable price.
Motivations for Short Selling
Investors short sell for a few main reasons:
- Speculation: The most common reason. A trader believes a company’s stock is overvalued and will decline.
- Hedging: An investor might short a stock or an exchange-traded fund (ETF) to offset potential losses in their long portfolio. For example, a fund manager might short an index ETF to protect against a broad market downturn.
- Market Making and Arbitrage: Professional traders and market makers use short selling to facilitate trades and exploit price inefficiencies between related securities.
Costs and Mechanics
Short sellers face several expenses:
- Borrowing Fee: The broker charges a fee for loaning the shares. For hard-to-borrow stocks, this fee can be very high.
- Dividends: If the borrowed stock pays a dividend while the position is open, the short seller must pay that dividend amount to the lender out of their own pocket.
- Interest: Brokers charge interest on the margin loan used to maintain the short position.
Shares are typically held in street name (held by the broker). The brokerage firm handles all the complex mechanics of locating shares, managing the loan, and ensuring compliance with regulations like the uptick rule (which may restrict short sales when a stock is already falling sharply).
Regulatory and Ethical Considerations
Due to its potential to manipulate markets, short selling is heavily regulated. Naked short selling (selling shares that have not been confirmed as borrowable) is generally illegal in most major markets. Regulators require brokers to have a reasonable belief that the shares can be delivered before a short sale is executed. In times of extreme market stress, regulatory bodies may temporarily ban short selling of certain stocks to stabilize prices.