Short Selling
Strategies
Two Dozen Types of Short Sales
There are dozens of ways to sell short a stock.
1. Traditional Short Sale: Borrow the stock
against a fifty percent margin.
This is the only type of short sale that can be
squeezed when the share
price moves up because the short seller must add
money to their margin
account.
2. A Market Maker Short Sale: U. S. Market
Makers are not required to make
physical delivery of stock certificates when
they sell it. They are assumed
to be a repository of the company's shares.
3. A Brokerage House Short Sale: This is a
decision not to execute a buy
order from a client, but show the stock as owned
by the client on their
monthly brokerage firm account statement.
4. A Clearing House Short Sale: The Clearing
House doesn't execute the buy
order, but credits it to the brokerage firm
client's account.
5. A Naked Short Sale: This is where two
brokerage firms agree to trade
stock in a company with neither brokerage firm
requesting physical delivery
of the share certificates.
6. An Insider Short Sale: This is when insiders
with restricted stock use
it to sell short their company. It's illegal. It
was a common practice when
the Regulation S Hold Period was 40 days.
7. A Ferrari Short Sale: This is where a bloc of
stock is purchased. The
stock is converted to derivatives, thus
factoring the stock one hundred
fold or more. The short sale doesn't occur in
the Stock Market, but the
derivative owners are holding a short position.
8. The DTC Short Sale: This is when Depository
Trust Companies use the
stock they hold to sell short that stock.
9. The International Short Sale: Stock's created
offshore. The company is
listed to trade outside the United States
(usually Canada). However the
company is trading in the States. The shares are
sold into the States. The
Short Sale is moved to the Primary Country,
where the local brokers can
ensure that the short position will be covered
by the listed company, if
there is ever a successful short squeeze.
10. The Arbitrage Short Sale: LTV - Scattered
Securities is an example of
this short play. The Court in the LTV
reorganization determined the
exchange rate for new shares for old shares at
three cents. The Market
didn't read the Court decision. The old shares
traded far higher than the
Court Ordered exchange rate. The short sale was
done by selling old shares
and buying new shares before the Court mandated
exchange of share
certificates.
11. The Street Stock Short Sale: Sellers who are
insiders or who allege to
be insiders sell counterfeit stock to buyers
outside regular market
channels.
12. The MIDI Short Sale: Brokers sell stock at
prices well above the actual
trading price of the stock. This has been
popular with German OTC stocks
sold into the Middle East. The gap between the
sale price and the trading
price is an effective short sale.
13. The Depository Receipt Short Sale: Using
counterfeit stock, the seller
deposits it into an overseas bank. They then
sell Depository Receipts
against the counterfeit shares held by the bank.
I've seen this done in
Asia.
14. The Rockford Short Sale: An investment firm
buys shares and takes
physical delivery of the stock certificates.
They replace the real share
certificates with counterfeit share
certificates. Next they sell the real
shares back into the Market and repeat the
process. This practice does
wonders for their balance sheet. The tactic was
popularized in the Rockford
TV Series. It's been done in Asia with NYSE
shares.
15. The Tax Haven Bank Short Sale: Small
(usually Caribbean) banks act as
agents for their clients unwilling to reveal
their identity. The client
wants to buy stock. The bank doesn't buy the
stock on behalf of the client.
They simply show the sale within the bank's
accounting system. This
practice extends to gold etc.
16. The Lost Certificate Short Sale: Client
requests share certificate.
Broker sends it certified to the slightly wrong
address. It's returned to
broker. Using the certified receipt broker
claims the client has the share
certificate. A year is spent in proving it never
arrived. Meanwhile the
broker has the share certificate and can use it
to cover other short sales.
This happened to me in Vancouver.
17. The Margined Short Sale: Buyer buys stock on
margin. They can't take
physical delivery of their share certificates.
The broker sells the
margined account non-existent stock (a short
sale).
18. The Takeover Short Sale: Brokers add
non-existent stock into a takeover
with stock transaction. The buyer pays for the
non-existent shares. The
short seller gets cash or stock in the buyers
company.
19. The Attrition Short Sale: For OTC stocks
about 3% of the beneficial
owners of the stock disappear each year. They
die, forget they own the
stock, etc. Brokers can safely sell short 3% of
the float each year relying
on the fact that the beneficial owners will
never claim their stock.
20. Counterfeit Stock: Professionals regularly
send counterfeit share
certificates to Transfer Agents. A surprising
percentage are accepted as
real share certificates. The result is the
professional effectively has
sold short the shares involved in the
certificate.
21. Issue Depository Receipts without holding
the stock and sell the
Depository Receipts.
22. The Warrant or Option Short Sale. Buyer
holds the right to exercise
warrants or options, but doesn't do so. Instead,
they sell short the stock
and use the options or warrants as insurance.
This was popular among VSE
underwriters in the 1980s-1990s
23. Reg S Short Sale. Same format as the Warrant
or Option Short sale, but
using cheap Reg S stock. The short seller is
exposed for one year.
24. The Lending Short Sale. This was used by the
guy who introduced me to
the business. You offer to lend 90% of the face
value of the stock to the
borrower for a long period of time. Your
interest rate is better than that
of a bank. You take in the stock and sell it.
You lend 90% of the proceeds
from the sale. You are now short the stock. You
collect your interest
payments until the borrower defaults on the
loan.
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