• @nova_ad_vitum@lemmy.ca
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      1156 months ago

      If you don’t know much about investing then you shouldn’t short anything ever. People who know about investing will tell you that even when your logic is 100 percent sound, the market isn’t that predictable and in general the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.

      • @Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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        286 months ago

        Plus, the news of this would already be priced into the stock, so if anything the price is already low and these companies would need to pivot their business (which would increase the value again) or die (which would lower the price marginally, to zero). Either way, shorting is a bad strategy in this case.

        • @bamboo@lemm.ee
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          186 months ago

          Theoretically, yes. A short is sorta a negative stock. When you hold a normal stock, the price can never go below zero. But when you hold a negative stock, there’s no maximum value that stock could rise to.

          • @mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            Infinite and astronomical are used interchangeably here. Since you have to return a share to the person you borrowed it from, if you borrowed 1000 shares at $5 and sold them to make 5k, if the price jumps to something like $350 like gamestop, it would cost you $350,000 to cover them.

            Making 5k to lose 350k might as well be an infinite loss ot that investor, even though its technically a “smallish” sum. At that scale, it would destroy most people.

            You can also pay to keep a short going generally and try to wait out the madness, but you have to stay solvent to do it. The very stupid and very surprising “diamond handing” apes caused some hedge fund issues, although I think most just shrugged into other financial instruments.

      • @Wirlocke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        26 months ago

        I feel like shorting will always be riskier than normal investing. With stocks you have people at the company doing their best to raise that stock. With Shorts you are betting against a company that’s trying to survive.

        The chances of the CEO pulling something out of their ass, dubious or not, to maintain their profits is too high.

    • Scroll Responsibly
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      6 months ago

      If you get investing returns (like from shorting those companies)… you’re ironically not eligible to use the IRS direct file pilot (or at least for this year).

      Edit: this isn’t to knock direct file… which is good and cool (and should be expanded to have more features)

    • @barsquid@lemmy.world
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      46 months ago

      It is already priced in. Our human speed reactions are far too slow when the news has this obvious of a consequence.

    • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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      26 months ago

      Those companies actually helped develop this, see “free file alliance membership” for details. It includes 17 private companies such as Intuit, H&R Block, TaxSlayer, Tax$simple, etc.