How Short Selling Works
Short selling is often looked at as a nefarious aspect of trading and investing. However, it is quite legal, serves a necessary function in the securities
markets and can be a valuable tool for an investor -- whether on an individual or professional
level.
Short selling provides investors with the ability to profit from the decline in a stock's price, hedge positions or portfolios, manage taxes and create arbitrage
positions. Since short selling is complex and operates outside of the sight of many investors, short selling is highly misunderstood. So in this installment of The Finance Professor, I will offer a primer on short selling by covering the mechanics behind the short selling process, the account
requirements and the federal regulations that govern the transaction.
What Is Short Selling?
Short selling in its most basic form is when an investor takes a stance that a security will decline in value
. In doing so, the short seller will sell stock that they do not own. This transaction will trigger a series of processes that ensure that the sale of this stock can take place. I have created the following chart to help walk us through what happens.
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,309.92 | 1,091.49 | 2,138.44 | 32.12 |
Oil *
77.12
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154.48
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19.14
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37.61
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0.67
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10 Yr
3.21%
SPDR Gold
115.06
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-1.48%
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-1.72%
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-1.73%
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-2.04%
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