imported post
mlk, You specify "Sell Short" when you place your order. When you want to close the short position, you "Buy to Cover" rather than a regular "Buy" order.
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I disagree,
Az.

Stocks, on average, for all of 2004 have been falling. A lot. True, stocks, on average, over any ten-year period or more do rise in value, but that is pretty irrelevant to the short- and medium-term trader.
This morning, I did a screen for ETFs that had > 0% increase in the past three months. No results found. Cash it is.
I am reluctant to sell short at this moment since I do not know if I am bullish or bearish. More importantly, I do not know if the Market is bullish or bearish. I am legitamately undecided, neither bullish nor bearish. Watching my Scottrade account being eviscerated this week (what I get for having most of it in one sector) with no otherplace to invest has left me with my tail betwixt my legs. I like cash right now, totally neutral. I sold most of my stocks. I did not sell short. The Market is having major, unpredictible swings, like a thresher in
Maximum Overdrive. I should have listened to myself and
waited for confirmation. I gambled and lost. F****** ouch. (It is not so much the money as it is kicking myself.)
Just like refusal to buy a stock at the notion that it may very well fall quickly, I do not want to sell short due to the notion that the Market may decide to rally after all. If a market (or stock) bottom is perceived, value investors and institutions may drive the price back up and create a short squeeze. Indeed, a damned if you do, damned if you do-the-other-thing situation. "Don't" is the only reasonable course.