How to Trend Trade Shorts

To short means that you borrow stock from your broker to sell to a third party. The idea is to buy back the stock at a lower price, returning the shares to your broker while leaving the remaining cash in your account as a profit. A short seller does not own the stock before they sell it as they borrow it from another investor who already owns it. At a later date, the short seller buys back the stock they shorted and returns the stock to close out the loan. If the stock has fallen in price since they sold short, they can buy the stock back for less than they received for selling it. The difference is your profit. Please note that short selling is a transaction made on margin.

Characteristics of Trend-trading Shorts

Most ideal longer term trend shorts take four to twelve months after the peak price to setup on the weekly chart with the majority of these shorts triggering between six to nine months.

  • Look for stocks that had prior up-trends and support levels that can now act as downward resistance or entry areas.
  • Once a stock tops and starts to consolidate, you want it to slice through the 50-d moving average and then the 200-d moving average.
  • A crossover between the 50-d m.a. and the 200-d m.a. is ideal and is graphically presented on the KNOT chart
  • The odds of success increase with each failed attempt for the stock price to recover these major long term moving averages.
  • Head and shoulder tops can also serve as ideal setups for potential shorts if they take at least five months to develop.
  • A decreasing relative strength line and a negative pattern on the point and figure chart can also confirm that the stock is rolling over and setting up an ideal short.
  • Finally, volume should be increasing and the stock should be under distribution as it violates the major moving averages and starts to break former support levels.

CROX Example:

To initiate a short sale, you must place the order with your broker or online brokerage by determining the size and price at which the trade will occur. Your broker or brokerage company will check to see if shares are available in the specific stock selected or if they can borrow the shares. Once they are available or can be borrowed, they will be sold in the open market on the first plus tick or continuation of an up-tick also known as zero-plus tick (the stock must move up for the transaction to complete). To close the short position, the broker will purchase the shares using the original proceeds and return the shares to the third party.

As a short seller, you believe that the price of a particular stock will fall in value over time. For example: by establishing a short position for 100 shares in XYZ at $50, the broker will place $5,000 into your margin account. If the stock falls over the next few weeks and you decide to cover the short at $40, you will initiate a buy for 100 shares in XYZ using the money placed in your account when you sold short. The cost to buy back the shares in this example will be $4,000 or $1,000 less than the original short sale amount. This difference in price will result in $1000 cash that will now become your profit.

On the flip side, if the stock was to jump to $60, you would most likely cover your short or have your stop loss triggered, buying back the shares at this price. The cost would be $6000 or $1000 more than the original short sale, resulting in a 20% loss. The broker would take the additional $1000 from your cash account to cover the loss in the short sale. This is how you can lose money when shorting stocks. The higher the stocks rises, the more money you can lose, theoretically resulting with an infinite loss (excluding stop losses and broker margin calls).

If the stock rises in price or if the value of the stocks you are using as collateral goes down in price, you may be forced to add cash to your margin account or cover the short sale prematurely. Keep in mind that you must pay any dividends issued while you are short a particular stock.

The two basic reasons for selling short would be to profit from a stock that you believe is grossly overvalued (fundamentally or technically) or to hedge your account with protection from a down-swing in prices due to anticipated or unexpected events. If the stock continually fails to recover these key trend lines, a further decline may be in the immediate future and you may want to profit from this action. In the second case, you may own several stocks and fear a market downturn is on the horizon but don’t want to sell for certain reasons. Instead, the investor can short specific stocks to hedge their account against possible down-turns. Some investors diversify their portfolio with several long positions and a few short positions.

A short should be covered when it rises above the 200-d moving average and certainly covered when it rises above the 50-d moving average (especially if this line is above the 200-d m.a.). If the relative strength line starts to rise, gradually making its way to new high territory, I would advise covering the short position before a big breakout occurs.

Shorting stocks may contribute to a more consistent strategy throughout up-trending and down-trending cycles. As I have said in this blog before, shorting is not for everyone and nothing is wrong with sitting in cash during bear markets, awaiting the next breakout and a fresh batch of leaders.

Many traders believe that the most obvious area to place a short would be near the peak of stock’s trading range but I have found this to be untrue. Stocks making higher highs usually continue to make new highs so stay away from this strategy.

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Additional criteria for shorting candidates can be decelerating earnings and sales and a relative strength line heading down. Investors can also take the characteristics that we use for locating long positions and reverse the criteria to develop a list of possible short candidates. Even familiar chart patterns can be used to spot shorts; the reverse cup shaped base, the head and shoulders pattern and/or the flat base with a stock breaking heavily to the downside on above average volume. Industry groups that are becoming weak or are showing multiple stocks falling and breaking through key trend lines should be noted on a watch list. If one stocks looks like a short candidate, look for additional sister stocks that may have the same set-up. Remember, stocks usually move in groups whether they go up or down.

Setups for Selling Stocks Short

Most important: Always cut your losses quick! This rule applies to any strategy in the stock market.

Comments

  1. Chris – first of all I want to thank you for sharing your excellent thoughts and strategies in this site. I’m fairly new to trading and was have read most of your material but was wondering if you could give me some tips. I have signed up for Stockcharts.com and was wondering if you could share how you actually manage your lists — it’s very confusing to me. Where do you store your annotated charts, in the same list of your scan results? or in the snapshots? Also, do you use another software for intraday monitoring? Thanks Chris.

  2. Hi Chris,

    nice write up on shorting! I was curious, is the uptick rule still in effect? I heard a while ago there was some talk of getting rid of it. Not sure if that happened or not though…

  3. Ty,
    Thanks. The up-tick rule was eliminated last summer by the SEC. Some people on Wall Street want it back but I am not sure if that will happen.

  4. John,
    I manage my lists in the members section where I can store 500 charts per list with active annotations. The snapshots are just me using the right click of my mouse and “save-as” on to my computer after I save the annotations to my lists. Only one list can be active per person but that can have up to 500 charts as mentioned. Once a member of stockcharts, you can view intraday charts. I don’t monitor intraday charts very often (I view them) but rarely make a trade decision from these charts. I make the decisions from daily and weekly charts.

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