Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Inverteum Capital's avatar

1) "If you are long, you just need to be right on the business."

Good businesses can trade at insane valuations, e.g. pandemic stocks in 2021, and have their valuations punished severely due to worsening macro conditions.

Sure, you can say that you wouldn't invest in such an overvalued business, but it's tempting when everyone around you is raking it in.

Severe drawdowns can also test the resolve of the most patient investors.

2) "In shorting a stock, being right on your short isn’t enough.

You should also be right on timing."

You're right about shorting individual stocks. It's too easy to be on the wrong side of a short squeeze, like Bill Ackman with Herbalife (as pointed out in the post) and hedge funds with GameStop in early 2021.

3) "As long as you don’t close your short position you are paying interest on this debt everyday."

The funny part about high interest rates is that short ETFs actually have very high dividend yields right now, i.e. you are literally being paid to short. For example, SH (inverse S&P) pays a 6.2% dividend yield.

Obviously, you still have to be right on the direction and timing, otherwise you could lose money.

4) "When you short a stock, you are automatically misaligned with the active players. This is like battling uphill or swimming against the current."

This is definitely true. Shorting over the long term definitely makes no sense, but that doesn't mean it shouldn't be a component of a thoughtful investment strategy for times when the macro outlook is weak. https://blog.inverteum.com/p/professional-investment-strategies-need-short-component

Expand full comment
Denis Gorbunov's avatar

Good point about no limit to how much you can lose on a shorted stock. Shorting is harder than going long because the market goes up long-term, nobody really wants stocks to fall, and when they do fall, it happens way faster than when they grow. So you entry and exit must be precise. There's little room for mistakes.

Expand full comment

No posts