Freke1
I play at night... mostly
+47|6965|the best galaxy
It's too complicated to figure out. One moment everything is booming, next moment we're in a recession.
"Feel free to spend my tax money on the banks, Sir - I support the filthy rich."

Well at least I'm not having my a** shot off for some oil pipeline through a 3rd world country. THAT would be too much to handle I know.

I allways think of money like I had to save them up. So 10.000$ naturally becomes a gigantic sum! Although it takes 5min to borrow in the bank, but that's kidding Yourself. I'm not smart, I know.

Looking at the stocks (sold mine today with loss ) I'd say a lot of ppl are selling out. If nobody want Your stocks, they are worthless and we have a crash.
https://bf3s.com/sigs/7d11696e2ffd4edeff06466095e98b0fab37462c.png
OrangeHound
Busy doing highfalutin adminy stuff ...
+1,335|7068|Washington DC

Freke1 wrote:

Looking at the stocks (sold mine today with loss ) I'd say a lot of ppl are selling out. If nobody want Your stocks, they are worthless and we have a crash.
We already had a crash.  Selling low and buying high is never a wise financial decision ... the market is very over-sold right now.   I'm actually starting to move cash positions into the markets.
Freke1
I play at night... mostly
+47|6965|the best galaxy
I'll wait till the stocks go a little up. But who knows. The RSI is low for sure.
https://bf3s.com/sigs/7d11696e2ffd4edeff06466095e98b0fab37462c.png
Mr.Dooomed
Find your center.
+752|6746

Now is the best time for shorting stocks. That basically means you are betting the a stock will go down, so if you borrow 100 shares from the broker, of a stock at 40, and it goes down to 35 you get the 5 share difference, $500 in your pocket.

But if it starts going up, then you lose money, then all the people who bet it will go up make money, and everyone who shorted the stock (Bet it would go down) HAVE to buy it, which usually drives the stock up more and more.
Nature is a powerful force. Those who seek to subdue nature, never do so permanently.
Scorpion0x17
can detect anyone's visible post count...
+691|7184|Cambridge (UK)

Im_Dooomed wrote:

Now is the best time for shorting stocks. That basically means you are betting the a stock will go down, so if you borrow 100 shares from the broker, of a stock at 40, and it goes down to 35 you get the 5 share difference, $500 in your pocket.

But if it starts going up, then you lose money, then all the people who bet it will go up make money, and everyone who shorted the stock (Bet it would go down) HAVE to buy it, which usually drives the stock up more and more.
Short selling is one of the things that got us into this mess in the first place.

The practice should be banned, totally and permanently, imo.
Mr.Dooomed
Find your center.
+752|6746

Lol, no. And besides, it's not like the short selling i do now was the cause of the collapse of the market recently.
Nature is a powerful force. Those who seek to subdue nature, never do so permanently.
Scorpion0x17
can detect anyone's visible post count...
+691|7184|Cambridge (UK)

Im_Dooomed wrote:

Lol, no. And besides, it's not like the short selling i do now was the cause of the collapse of the market recently.
"Lol, no."???

As in you think short selling had nothing to do with the collapse?

So why did they ban short selling of certain key stocks just as the collapse started?

And if you're short selling right now, you're doing nothing but making the situation worse.

Last edited by Scorpion0x17 (2008-10-08 14:59:35)

Mr.Dooomed
Find your center.
+752|6746

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

So why did they ban short selling of certain key stocks just as the collapse started?
Just. As. The. Collapse. Started. Meaning, short selling didn't have much to do with the actual crash. To answer your question -> So people couldn't make huge profits on all those shitty stocks that were doomed to collapse because of their idiocy?

Short selling isn't that big of a business in a regular market, its just the way a person wants to do his trading, but, in a huge collapse of the market, ya, thats how you can make profit. Short selling isn't the cause of a collapse.
Nature is a powerful force. Those who seek to subdue nature, never do so permanently.
Scorpion0x17
can detect anyone's visible post count...
+691|7184|Cambridge (UK)

Im_Dooomed wrote:

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

So why did they ban short selling of certain key stocks just as the collapse started?
Just. As. The. Collapse. Started. Meaning, short selling didn't have much to do with the actual crash. To answer your question -> So people couldn't make huge profits on all those shitty stocks that were doomed to collapse because of their idiocy?

Short selling isn't that big of a business in a regular market, its just the way a person wants to do his trading, but, in a huge collapse of the market, ya, thats how you can make profit. Short selling isn't the cause of a collapse.
No, not big business at all.

the independent wrote:

What sort of money is involved?

The hedge funds and investment banks that dabble in short selling do so with astronomical amounts of money. Analysis conducted by The Independent shows that hedge funds have made more than £1bn betting on a fall in HBOS's share price in the past two and a half months. One single hedge fund is thought to have made £1bn betting on the collapse of Northern Rock last year.

(source)
£1 BILLION in two and half months short selling on one companies shares.

And it doesn't cause a collapse in share prices, eh?

From same article:

the independent wrote:

So what's all the controversy?

The biggest concern is that short selling has often been associated with market abuse. The clearest victim of such abuse was HBOS itself, earlier this year. Over the course of just an hour one day in March, its shares plunged when rumours swept the stock market that the bank had financial problems similar to those that caused the collapse of Northern Rock. The rumours were totally false and the share price recovered later in the day, but not before investors with short positions in HBOS shares had made a handsome gain. City regulators are still trying to discover who started the malicious gossip about HBOS, but there is widespread suspicion that the rumours were planted by a hedge fund keen to make a fast buck. Such behaviour is illegal, but also very difficult to investigate.
So yeah, like you said, shorting had nothing what-so-ever to do with the collapse.



(btw, I'm not saying it was the only factor in the collapse, just that it was a contributing factor - bottom line is, shorting is a factor in driving share prices down)

Last edited by Scorpion0x17 (2008-10-08 15:19:08)

m3thod
All kiiiiiiiiinds of gainz
+2,197|7090|UK
Hey, dooooomed! According to the Archbishop of York (big man in Anglican church) you're a bank robber and asset stripper!

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, described short sellers as "bank robbers and asset strippers" earlier this week, while the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, condemned the "basic unreality" of the global trade in debts. (taken from source below)

But in true hypocritical fashion the Anglican chuch has been profiterring from short selling.  So hands up if you were suprised?!

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/fina … lling.html

Last edited by m3thod (2008-10-08 15:21:22)

Blackbelts are just whitebelts who have never quit.
stryyker
bad touch
+1,682|7138|California

I have faith we will rebound eventually.

But on the lower side of that, the people of today are so butthurt when their money gets used that the overall affect of a major recession/depression could have a domino effect on the world. People will die, countries will topple... that sort of thing
Mr.Dooomed
Find your center.
+752|6746

Ya, so they bet the stock would go down. And the article says they created rumors that would cause it to go down so they can make money. SURE, that is wrong.

But HOW though, is legit short selling in general the cause of market collapse? Because thats what I do, and thats what I'm talking about. Explain that.

Its the current SELLERS of the stock who are the ones that are making a stock crash. Not the ones who do short selling. Short sellers profit from other investors in the market that are selling the stock, its not like they are pulling money out of the company's bank account. The market is a tug of war. Those who sell make money off those who are buying, and vise versa.
Nature is a powerful force. Those who seek to subdue nature, never do so permanently.
Freke1
I play at night... mostly
+47|6965|the best galaxy
I'm just trying to figure out what will happen when the panic settles and the reality sets in.
The reality that the taxpayers now now have aquired all the bad loans in their western societies.
This means a tax increase and a big hault in spending, layoffs, stock sales.
Add a high oil price and a cold winter... You never know... maybe also another war... this could be really ugly.

I just don't get how the clever bank managements could not see the dangers. It's so unproffesional.
https://bf3s.com/sigs/7d11696e2ffd4edeff06466095e98b0fab37462c.png
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6829|'Murka

Freke1 wrote:

I'm just trying to figure out what will happen when the panic settles and the reality sets in.
The reality that the taxpayers now now have aquired all the bad loans in their western societies.
This means a tax increase and a big hault in spending, layoffs, stock sales.
Add a high oil price and a cold winter... You never know... maybe also another war... this could be really ugly.

I just don't get how the clever bank managements could not see the dangers. It's so unproffesional.
Or...

It frees up the mortgages to be refinanced with the lowered property values and fixed interest rates, allowing people to keep their homes, maintaining liquidity in the credit markets, and bringing regular income into the government coffers from the mortgage payments.

People may scream about McCain, but he was spot on with regard to the root issue with the financial markets and the linkages to jobs.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
san4
The Mas
+311|7107|NYC, a place to live
Short selling is dangerous because it provides financial incentives for people to identify companies that are overvalued. For example, short sellers can make money by revealing that insolvent banks are insolvent. It's much better that society not know the truth because we can't handle the truth.
Freke1
I play at night... mostly
+47|6965|the best galaxy
someone has a loss and someone is going to pay.
"frees up the mortgages" and "refinanced" are just words.
It's like when the banks say: "Don't sell if You have a long investment horizon. They will bounce back."
I say: "Why take the loss? You are just playing by the agenda that by not selling mine Your stocks won't fall."

Or:
the government: "We're f*cked, we have to make a rescue plan to stop people from loosing their faith in the banks"
me: "if You have the need for a rescue plan then You are f*cked and then I've no faith in the banks"
https://bf3s.com/sigs/7d11696e2ffd4edeff06466095e98b0fab37462c.png
13rin
Member
+977|6898

OrangeHound wrote:

Freke1 wrote:

Looking at the stocks (sold mine today with loss ) I'd say a lot of ppl are selling out. If nobody want Your stocks, they are worthless and we have a crash.
We already had a crash.  Selling low and buying high is never a wise financial decision ... the market is very over-sold right now.   I'm actually starting to move cash positions into the markets.
Meh. My positions aren't getting hit thus affecting me in the long term.  It's kind funny to see this fish school frenzy.

But, wait for another dip before you buy.

Last edited by DBBrinson1 (2008-10-08 20:09:51)

I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something.  - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6829|'Murka

Freke1 wrote:

"frees up the mortgages" and "refinanced" are just words.
Actually, they're more than just words. Have you ever actually had a mortgage before?
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Pierre
I hunt criminals down for a living
+68|7094|Belgium

Freke1 wrote:

It's like when the banks say: "Don't sell if You have a long investment horizon. They will bounce back."
I say: "Why take the loss? You are just playing by the agenda that by not selling mine Your stocks won't fall."

Or:
the government: "We're f*cked, we have to make a rescue plan to stop people from loosing their faith in the banks"
me: "if You have the need for a rescue plan then You are f*cked and then I've no faith in the banks"
Do you have a degree in psychology?
Scorpion0x17
can detect anyone's visible post count...
+691|7184|Cambridge (UK)

Im_Dooomed wrote:

Ya, so they bet the stock would go down. And the article says they created rumors that would cause it to go down so they can make money. SURE, that is wrong.

But HOW though, is legit short selling in general the cause of market collapse? Because thats what I do, and thats what I'm talking about. Explain that.

Its the current SELLERS of the stock who are the ones that are making a stock crash. Not the ones who do short selling. Short sellers profit from other investors in the market that are selling the stock, its not like they are pulling money out of the company's bank account. The market is a tug of war. Those who sell make money off those who are buying, and vise versa.
It is part of the cause.

Why?

Partly exactly because it is a zero-sum game - some one always loses, whether you're shorting or not. Partly because the value of a stock is determined by a combination of supply, demand (as I'm sure you know - as supply increases, value drops and as demand increases, value rises) and perceived value - now, by shorting you're saying "I perceive this stock to be worth less than it is" and so, all other things being equal, the value of the stock decreases.

Sure, if you're just a private individual without huge sums of money invested in the markets, you individually have little effect on the prices, but when you've got, not only the hedge-funds but also, 10s, even 100s of thousands of individuals shorting stocks, those tiny individual effects on stock values all start to add up.
san4
The Mas
+311|7107|NYC, a place to live

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

Im_Dooomed wrote:

Ya, so they bet the stock would go down. And the article says they created rumors that would cause it to go down so they can make money. SURE, that is wrong.

But HOW though, is legit short selling in general the cause of market collapse? Because thats what I do, and thats what I'm talking about. Explain that.

Its the current SELLERS of the stock who are the ones that are making a stock crash. Not the ones who do short selling. Short sellers profit from other investors in the market that are selling the stock, its not like they are pulling money out of the company's bank account. The market is a tug of war. Those who sell make money off those who are buying, and vise versa.
It is part of the cause.

Why?

Partly exactly because it is a zero-sum game - some one always loses, whether you're shorting or not. Partly because the value of a stock is determined by a combination of supply, demand (as I'm sure you know - as supply increases, value drops and as demand increases, value rises) and perceived value - now, by shorting you're saying "I perceive this stock to be worth less than it is" and so, all other things being equal, the value of the stock decreases.

Sure, if you're just a private individual without huge sums of money invested in the markets, you individually have little effect on the prices, but when you've got, not only the hedge-funds but also, 10s, even 100s of thousands of individuals shorting stocks, those tiny individual effects on stock values all start to add up.
Why is that a bad thing if the stock is overvalued?
Scorpion0x17
can detect anyone's visible post count...
+691|7184|Cambridge (UK)

san4 wrote:

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

Im_Dooomed wrote:

Ya, so they bet the stock would go down. And the article says they created rumors that would cause it to go down so they can make money. SURE, that is wrong.

But HOW though, is legit short selling in general the cause of market collapse? Because thats what I do, and thats what I'm talking about. Explain that.

Its the current SELLERS of the stock who are the ones that are making a stock crash. Not the ones who do short selling. Short sellers profit from other investors in the market that are selling the stock, its not like they are pulling money out of the company's bank account. The market is a tug of war. Those who sell make money off those who are buying, and vise versa.
It is part of the cause.

Why?

Partly exactly because it is a zero-sum game - some one always loses, whether you're shorting or not. Partly because the value of a stock is determined by a combination of supply, demand (as I'm sure you know - as supply increases, value drops and as demand increases, value rises) and perceived value - now, by shorting you're saying "I perceive this stock to be worth less than it is" and so, all other things being equal, the value of the stock decreases.

Sure, if you're just a private individual without huge sums of money invested in the markets, you individually have little effect on the prices, but when you've got, not only the hedge-funds but also, 10s, even 100s of thousands of individuals shorting stocks, those tiny individual effects on stock values all start to add up.
Why is that a bad thing if the stock is overvalued?
It's not. But short selling doesn't only drive down the value of over-valued stocks. If a stock is sold short, and there are no other contributing factors, it's value will drop regardless.
san4
The Mas
+311|7107|NYC, a place to live

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

san4 wrote:

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

It is part of the cause.

Why?

Partly exactly because it is a zero-sum game - some one always loses, whether you're shorting or not. Partly because the value of a stock is determined by a combination of supply, demand (as I'm sure you know - as supply increases, value drops and as demand increases, value rises) and perceived value - now, by shorting you're saying "I perceive this stock to be worth less than it is" and so, all other things being equal, the value of the stock decreases.

Sure, if you're just a private individual without huge sums of money invested in the markets, you individually have little effect on the prices, but when you've got, not only the hedge-funds but also, 10s, even 100s of thousands of individuals shorting stocks, those tiny individual effects on stock values all start to add up.
Why is that a bad thing if the stock is overvalued?
It's not. But short selling doesn't only drive down the value of over-valued stocks. If a stock is sold short, and there are no other contributing factors, it's value will drop regardless.
But when a short seller eventually buys the stock to cover the short sale, the transaction will have a virtually identical and opposite effect on the stock price.
Scorpion0x17
can detect anyone's visible post count...
+691|7184|Cambridge (UK)

san4 wrote:

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

san4 wrote:


Why is that a bad thing if the stock is overvalued?
It's not. But short selling doesn't only drive down the value of over-valued stocks. If a stock is sold short, and there are no other contributing factors, it's value will drop regardless.
But when a short seller eventually buys the stock to cover the short sale, the transaction will have a virtually identical and opposite effect on the stock price.
No it won't.

OK, I as the short seller, borrow stock from you. I sell it at current market value. At this point to value of the stock hardly changes - because I sell at market value. But then, due to other factors, the value of the stock falls. And I then finally buy the stocks from you - but, crucially, at a lower value than I sold them for - and that is key - you have to remember that the value of a stock is largely based on what price everybody holding/wanting them is willing to sell/buy them at. By buying at a lower value to what I sold them at, my contribution to that perceived value is downwards - because I'm saying "sure, I'll sell at 15c per share, 'cos they're only worth 10c!".
san4
The Mas
+311|7107|NYC, a place to live

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

san4 wrote:

Scorpion0x17 wrote:

It's not. But short selling doesn't only drive down the value of over-valued stocks. If a stock is sold short, and there are no other contributing factors, it's value will drop regardless.
But when a short seller eventually buys the stock to cover the short sale, the transaction will have a virtually identical and opposite effect on the stock price.
No it won't.

OK, I as the short seller, borrow stock from you. I sell it at current market value. At this point to value of the stock hardly changes - because I sell at market value. But then, due to other factors, the value of the stock falls. And I then finally buy the stocks from you - but, crucially, at a lower value than I sold them for - and that is key - you have to remember that the value of a stock is largely based on what price everybody holding/wanting them is willing to sell/buy them at. By buying at a lower value to what I sold them at, my contribution to that perceived value is downwards - because I'm saying "sure, I'll sell at 15c per share, 'cos they're only worth 10c!".
That sounds right. Basically supply and demand determine the price of a stock. But that doesn't mean there's anything wrong with short selling unless there is also something wrong with buying. If I go out and buy a million shares of a company, and there are no other contributing factors, the stock price will go up, regardless of the real value of the company. Neither buying nor short-selling are inherently manipulative, they're just bets in opposite directions.

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2025 Jeff Minard