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- BUSINESS, Page 44MONEY ANGLESIt's Not Easy to Be Short
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- By Andrew Tobias
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- With the U.S. economy shaky and the Japanese stock market
- down 25% in three months, this may be the time to sell short.
- There are two reasons to short stocks right now (and one not
- to):
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- 1) If the stocks you pick go down, you make money. Short a
- stock at 40 that drops to 30, and you've made ten bucks. It may
- be too late to short United Airlines, which dropped from 294
- to 140 before news of the latest buyout plan (you'd have made
- $15,400 shorting 100 shares), but with the Dow Jones industrial
- average only 4% below its Jan. 2 all-time high, there's still
- plenty of room for stocks to fall.
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- 2) Your broker will love you for it. He'll get to charge a
- commission when you initiate the short (selling shares of a
- stock you don't yet own) and another when you "cover" (buying
- them back), just as he would if you bought and sold a stock
- normally. But your broker's real thrill will be the interest
- he earns on the proceeds of your sale. Because even though you
- didn't own the shares you sold (your broker borrowed them for
- you from another customer), you really did sell them, and your
- broker really did receive cash. By rights, you should earn
- interest on that cash. But unless you're a very big, insistent
- customer, you won't. Your broker keeps it. Wall Street makes
- hundreds of millions of dollars this way each year.
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- The reason not to sell short:
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- You'll lose money. Well, conceivably you won't; you may just
- lose sleep. But probably. To begin with, there are the
- aforementioned commissions. On top of that, if the stock pays
- a dividend, you don't get it -- you pay it. (With short sales,
- everything works in reverse.) Mainly, though, if the stock
- you've shorted goes up instead of down, you lose a dollar for
- every point it climbs.
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- You may think it's easy to pick stocks that will go down.
- It certainly seems easy enough when you're not trying. But it's
- actually even harder than picking stocks that will go up. Over
- time, more stocks rise than fall.
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- Granted, in a bear market almost all stocks fall. But how
- sure are you we're in for a bear market? Or that a good deal
- of the damage hasn't already been done? (The Dow is near its
- all-time high, but many lesser stocks are off 20% or more.)
- "Our Fund Timing Index has risen to its highest and most
- bullish level in history," reported a recent issue of Norman
- Fosback's Mutual Fund Forecaster, which looks for a 32% rise
- in the market over the next twelve months. Sure, Wall Street
- seems gloomy these days, says Fosback, but that's the time to
- buy.
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- If you do find a stock you're certain is overpriced -- like
- the Germany Fund not long ago, selling for twice the value of
- its assets -- often you won't be able to short it after all,
- because your broker can't find anyone to lend the shares. Or
- if he can, you get caught in a "short squeeze," in which the
- stock gets bid up to even more absurd levels by short sellers
- forced to buy back and return borrowed shares.
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- Far better, if you're convinced the market's headed down,
- to buy puts (at least with puts, your loss is limited to the
- size of your bet) or leave all this to the managers of your
- mutual fund. Some funds, like Fidelity Magellan, feel obligated
- to remain nearly fully invested at all times. But others, like
- Mutual Shares, may go heavily into cash, or, like the
- closed-end Zweig Fund, short stocks themselves.
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