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What Is Short Selling?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 8, 20264 min read
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Short selling is the practice of selling shares you don't currently own, with the goal of buying them back at a lower price in the future.

How Short Selling Works

Step 1: Borrow shares from a broker

  • Example: Borrow 100 Apple shares at $150/share

Step 2: Sell the borrowed shares

  • Receive $15,000 cash

Step 3: Wait for price to fall

  • Apple falls to $120/share

Step 4: Buy back the shares

  • Pay $12,000 to buy 100 shares

Step 5: Return borrowed shares to broker

  • Profit: $15,000 (sale) - $12,000 (buyback) = $3,000

You profited by betting the stock would fall.

Asymmetric Risk

Short selling has asymmetric risk:

Maximum profit: Stock price falls to zero

  • You sell at $150, buy back at $0
  • Profit: $150/share (limited)

Maximum loss: Unlimited

  • You sell at $150
  • Stock rises to $300 (you lose $150/share)
  • Stock rises to $500 (you lose $350/share)
  • Stock rises infinitely (you lose infinitely)

This is opposite to buying stocks:

  • Maximum loss: Stock goes to zero (limited)
  • Maximum profit: Stock rises infinitely (unlimited)

Short Squeeze

A short squeeze occurs when short sellers are forced to buy back shares, driving prices higher:

2021 GameStop example:

  • Short sellers heavily shorted GameStop
  • Reddit investors bought aggressively
  • Stock surged from $20 to $480
  • Short sellers faced margin calls (forced to buy back)
  • Buying pressure drove price even higher
  • Result: Short sellers lost billions

This is why short selling is dangerous—forced buybacks can spiral out of control.

Margin and Borrowing Costs

Short selling requires a margin account and has costs:

Margin requirement: Typically 50-100% of sale proceeds must stay in account

  • Sell $15,000 of stock → must have $7,500-$15,000 in account

Borrowing costs: You pay interest on borrowed shares

  • Hard-to-borrow stocks: 1-5% annual interest
  • Easy-to-borrow stocks: 0.1-0.5% annual interest

Dividend risk: If stock pays dividend, you must pay it to the shareholder

  • Short $10,000 of stock paying 2% dividend → you owe $200 annually

When Short Sellers Profit

Overvalued stocks: Stock is expensive relative to fundamentals

  • Example: Wirecard was a German company with massive accounting fraud, but short sellers identified it

Declining industries: Companies in dying industries

  • Example: Short sellers identified Blockbuster's decline before it became obvious

Fraud: Companies committing accounting fraud

  • Example: Enron, Theranos (fraudulent blood-testing company)

Bankruptcies: Companies heading for failure

  • Example: Lehman Brothers in 2008

Short Sellers vs. Longs

Longs (traditional investors):

  • Buy stock
  • Profit if price rises
  • Limited downside (stock goes to zero)
  • Unlimited upside

Shorts:

  • Sell stock they don't own
  • Profit if price falls
  • Limited upside (stock goes to zero)
  • Unlimited downside

Theoretically, shorts provide a check on fraud and overvaluation. Practically, they can be destabilizing.

Famous Short Sellers

Michael Burry: Shorted mortgage-backed securities before 2008 crash; profited $100+ million

Jim Chanos: Identified Enron fraud before collapse; made tens of millions

Carson Block: Identified frauds in Chinese companies, made millions

These are exceptions. Most individual short sellers lose money.

Risks of Short Selling

1. Unlimited losses: Stock can rise infinitely; losses are unlimited

2. Forced buybacks: Margin calls can force you to buy back at worst times

3. Borrowing costs: Interest and dividend payments reduce profits

4. Short squeezes: Coordinated buying can force prices infinitely higher

5. Market timing risk: Even if you're right long-term, timing is hard

Short Selling in Practice

For professionals: Short selling can be profitable if done by skilled analysts identifying fraud/overvaluation

For individuals: Extremely risky

  • Asymmetric risk (unlimited loss, limited gain)
  • Margin calls force selling at worst times
  • Timing is hard
  • Costs eat into returns

Most advisors recommend against short selling for individual investors.

Alternatives to Short Selling

Put options: Bet on stock decline without borrowing shares

  • Limited loss (option premium paid)
  • Doesn't require margin
  • Less risky than short selling

Inverse ETFs: Bet on market decline

  • Decay over time (not suitable for long-term)
  • Simple to use
  • Limited research required

Diversification: Hold bonds and cash

  • Reduces downside in bear markets
  • Less exciting than shorting
  • Much less risky

The Bottom Line

Short selling is for sophisticated investors with specific thesis (fraud, overvaluation) and risk management. Individual investors should avoid it due to unlimited loss potential, margin call risks, and difficulty timing.

If bearish on market, better alternatives include diversification into bonds, buying put options, or simply holding cash and waiting for better opportunities.

◆ Sources

  1. Short Selling Explained — Investopedia
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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