benchmark Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 Is shorting stock a bad idea in general? For example, LinkedIn seems to be a primary candidate for shorting, purely based on valuation. Moderator, feel free to delete the post if it's been discussed already. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JBird Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 You can be totally correct about a short thesis and be forced to endure a lot of agony before you make any money out of it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nkp007 Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 Also traditional shorting is not asymmetric. Upside is limited. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CorpRaider Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 I personally have only bought put options. Shorts theoretically have infinite loss potential. That doesn't work well if you plug it into the kelly equation. hah! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benchmark Posted August 12, 2013 Author Share Posted August 12, 2013 You can be totally correct about a short thesis and be forced to edure a lot of agony before you make any money out of it. I'm finding that to be true :) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benchmark Posted August 12, 2013 Author Share Posted August 12, 2013 Also traditional shorting is not asymmetric. Upside is limited. Are you referring to the fact that the loss could be unlimited? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Uccmal Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 I think you need to separate traditional short sellers from short sellers who deliberately catalyze a position such as Muddy Waters, or Jim Chanos, or Ackman. My understanding is that traditional short sellers try to grab a falling knife on the way down, not on the way up. Linkedin, while obviously overvalued, has earnings, capital, a brand, and upside earnings potential. You need a company that has nothing there to hold its stock up. Linkedin has 1 billion in cash as of 6 weeks ago, and essentially no debt. So, how do you set your target to buy the shares you sold short: $50, $100, 150? What's fair value for LinkedIn? I have a hard enough time setting upside sell targets on value stocks. Should I sell my shares of BAC at 16, $20, $24? And I have already made 100% profit to date on the aggregate position. Seems like torture to me unless you can identify and publicize a catalyst. LinkedIn is overvalued doesn't seem like a sufficient catalyst to me. The difference between Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, and Netfilx, versus .coms of 13 years ago is they they have viable businesses with real revenue and cash flow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sethatk Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 If I have learned anything it is that shorting is not for me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nkp007 Posted August 12, 2013 Share Posted August 12, 2013 Also traditional shorting is not asymmetric. Upside is limited. Are you referring to the fact that the loss could be unlimited? That upside is limited to 100% through traditional shorting. If it goes to 0, you double your money. Unless you use options / CDS. But those are time-constrained and may be priced at a premium if what's obvious to you is obvious to other people. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
benchmark Posted August 13, 2013 Author Share Posted August 13, 2013 I think you need to separate traditional short sellers from short sellers who deliberately catalyze a position such as Muddy Waters, or Jim Chanos, or Ackman. My understanding is that traditional short sellers try to grab a falling knife on the way down, not on the way up. Linkedin, while obviously overvalued, has earnings, capital, a brand, and upside earnings potential. You need a company that has nothing there to hold its stock up. Linkedin has 1 billion in cash as of 6 weeks ago, and essentially no debt. So, how do you set your target to buy the shares you sold short: $50, $100, 150? What's fair value for LinkedIn? I have a hard enough time setting upside sell targets on value stocks. Should I sell my shares of BAC at 16, $20, $24? And I have already made 100% profit to date on the aggregate position. Seems like torture to me unless you can identify and publicize a catalyst. LinkedIn is overvalued doesn't seem like a sufficient catalyst to me. The difference between Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, and Netfilx, versus .coms of 13 years ago is they they have viable businesses with real revenue and cash flow. I agree that LinkedIn is a real company with real earnings, but it's only growing at 60-70% y2y, using forward earning, it's trading at about 500+ PE. The short thesis is purely based on rich valuation. At some point, the growth will slow, and the stock will follow, though I don't know when. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
meiroy Posted August 13, 2013 Share Posted August 13, 2013 Also traditional shorting is not asymmetric. Upside is limited. Are you referring to the fact that the loss could be unlimited? That upside is limited to 100% through traditional shorting. If it goes to 0, you double your money. Unless you use options / CDS. But those are time-constrained and may be priced at a premium if what's obvious to you is obvious to other people. Considering you are not using your own money to short the possible upside is far greater than 100%, perhaps it can be compared to the initial margin used? In addition, you can use the funds from the short to reinvest in a long which means an infinite upside, with other people's money ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JBird Posted August 13, 2013 Share Posted August 13, 2013 Considering you are not using your own money to short the possible upside is far greater than 100%, perhaps it can be compared to the initial margin used? In addition, you can use the funds from the short to reinvest in a long which means an infinite upside, with other people's money ;) What broker is allowing you to use proceeds from short positions to initiate long positions? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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