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Stockscores.com Perspectives
For the week ending February 21, 2004

In this week's issue:

You can buy a stock or you can sell it. For most investors, the buying usually comes first. We buy a stock in anticipation of it going up, so that we can sell it at a profit.

It is also possible to sell the stock first. Sell the stock with the expectation that it is destined to go lower, so that we can buy it back cheaper in the future. This simple reversal of the process is called shorting. Successful investors utilize this strategy, taking advantage of the simple fact that stocks do not always go up. However, there are a few different rules that investors need to be aware of when shorting stocks.

The most important thing to realize is that, when you short a stock, you have to borrow it from your brokerage house. To do that, your brokerage house has to have the stock to lend. If you short a stock, the brokerage house will actually deliver the shares to the new owner by using shares that another of their customers own. The idea is that they will replace the borrowed shares when you buy them back, effectively covering your short.

The ramification of this is that you can not short any stock that you want as the brokerage house has to have the stock in inventory. Generally speaking, stocks that have good liquidity (trade at least 30 time a day) have a wide enough circulation that your brokerage house will allow you to short the stock. However, an added risk of shorting is that the brokerage house could order you to buy the stock back if they are unable to cover the borrowed shares. That order to buy back can come any time and may come at a time when you are forced to take a loss.

Another important consideration is that there is no limit to how high a stock can go. When you buy a stock, the maximum amount you can lose is your investment. However, when you short a stock, the potential loss has no limit because the stock could keep going higher and higher. It is for this reason that many people consider shorting too risky. My opinion is that buying or shorting are both risky if the individual doing it lacks discipline to limit losses. For the disciplined and experienced investor, shorting can be worth the extra risk.

Because of this added risk, many brokerage houses will not allow you to short stocks that are under $3. Their concern is that cheap stocks are at risk to show more volatility and could go dramatically higher, effectively wiping out a lot of a client's equity.

The added risk of shorting also requires that the client maintain more money in their account than is necessary to buy the stock back. This extra amount is referred to as margin. Generally, brokerage houses require 150% of the market price of the stock that is shorted. So, if you short sold 1000 shares of a $10 stock, you should have $15,000 in your account. Remember, of course, that when you short sold the 1000 shares you put $10,000 in your account. So, you really only put up $5000 in equity. But, if the stock goes up, you may be required to add more equity to your account to ensure that the 150% requirement is kept.

Having the option of shorting open to you is liberating, as it no longer forces you to only buy stocks that you think is going to go up. A psychological hurdle for investors is "hoping" a stock will go higher instead of heeding the truth, which often says the opposite. When an investor can make money on either side of the market, he or she is likely to make better judgments.

Another advantage of shorting is that stocks tend to move down more quickly than they move up. Perhaps this is because fear is a more powerful emotion than greed. Those proficient at anticipating stocks that are destined to go lower are often rewarded with shorter hold periods, and therefore, lower opportunity costs.

The key to taking advantage of the shorting mechanism is, of course, knowing how to find shorting opportunities. The Stockscores StockSchool teaches proven short selling strategies, for more information, check out StockSchool

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This week, I decided to look for some short selling opportunities using two of the Strategies taught in the StockSchool course; the Short Term and Long Term Breakdowns. These Market Scan seek out stocks that are breaking through short or long term support. From the search results, I check the individual charts to see if they are breaking from a good negative pattern. After looking through a lot of charts from these two scans, I found four that I think have good potential to go lower. Give these some consideration if you are comfortable with short selling.

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1. CKC
CKC is breaking down from a head and shoulders topping pattern. The stock has falling tops on the right side of the formation, which is a sign of pessimism. The support price of $5.50 was violated on Friday, indicating this stock has good potential to fall down to the next support zone at $4.

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2. T.TRP
The right side of the T.TRP chart shows a descending triangle pattern, indicating that investors are growing frustrated with the company and the sellers are beginning to take hold. The stock broke through support on Friday at $27 and looks like it may fall down to the $25 price leve, which is the next floor. The Sentiment Stockscore is falling fast.

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3. TSAI
A long up trend appears to be broken on TSAI, and the stock broke down through support at $20. The Sentiment Stockscore has fallen below the critical 60 point, as investor begin to take profits on this high flier. Unless the stock moves back up through resistance at $22, I think this one appears likely to go lower.

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4. FDRY
FDRY is breaking long term support levels at $22.50 and is moving lower from low price volatility, indicating confidence is being broken. The large downward gap a few weeks ago indicates investors are rattled, and it seems that downward momentum may increase.

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References
  • Get the Stockscore on any of over 20,000 North American stocks.
  • Background on the theories used by Stockscores.
  • Strategies that can help you find new opportunities.
  • Scan the market using extensive filter criteria.
  • Build a portfolio of stocks and view a slide show of their charts.
  • See which sectors are leading the market, and their components.

    Disclaimer
    This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don't consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligence.

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