Bottom of the range: Difference between revisions

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{{disaster cafe}}{{d|Bottom of the range|/ˈbɒtəm ɒv ðə reɪnʤ/|n}}All other things being equal, a dangerous place to play. We have looked elsewhere at the travails of [[Melvin Capital Management LP]] when it tried to short  [[GameStop]], but this points to a general proposition: if your strategy involves prices staying low, or going lower, your arse is hanging out if you invest at the “bottom of the range” of plausible prices.
{{a|disaster|{{image|disaster cafe|jpg}}{{image|GME|png}Ouch ouch ouch}}}}{{d|Bottom of the range|/ˈbɒtəm ɒv ðə reɪnʤ/|n}}All other things being equal, a dangerous place to play. We have looked elsewhere at the travails of [[Melvin Capital Management LP]] when it tried to short  [[GameStop]], but this points to a general proposition: if your strategy involves prices staying low, or going lower, your arse is hanging out if you invest at the “bottom of the range” of plausible prices.
 
===[[GameStop]] and the [[outsider trading|outsider traders]]===
In [[GameStop]]: An equity cannot have a negative value; there is a natural limit to how much you can make by shorting it. If the stock is already low against its historical range there is only so much further it can go. Between 2008 and 2020, GME traded between 15.00 and 5.00. By mid 2019 it was below a dollar. Here is the problem — even without accounting for the novel risk of [[outsider trading]]: the most you can make shorting is 90c. If, by some hap, the company returns to its own former fortunes — perhaps it is acquired, or announces a new digital strategy you weren’t expecting— you stand to lose 1400c. Unlike a long position, putting on a short ''requires'' you to borrow not a fixed amount of cash, but the security you are shorting. Your repayment obligation at any time is the prevailing price to buy back the stock. In between times, your broker will insist that you pay it that cash value, each day.
An equity cannot have a negative value — not even one as ropey as [[GME]] — so there is a natural limit to how much you can make by shorting it: your purchase price. The lower that price, the less, in absolute dollars, you can make by shorting a single share (but the more shares you can afford to buy!!!). This is where the significance of the range comes in: if the stock is already low against its historical range, and low in absolute terms — as, by 2019, was [[GME]] — there is only so much further it can go: if Melvin put on its short at $1.00, it stood to gain at most $1 per share. But it is hardly outlandish to suppose a stock could return to points ''higher'' in its range: after all, it has been there before. The stock might ''seem'' in terminal decline, but look: things can change. Even without the mendacious activities of the Reddit [[outside trading|outside traders]], it wasn’t crazy that GME could go back to $15.00 per share. Even this kind of move would be crippling: Unlike a “long” position, a [[short sale]] ''requires'' you to borrow not a fixed amount of cash, but ''the prevailing value of security you are shorting''. Since you don’t ''have'' that stock — you sold it short — if it rises, so will your [[margin]] obligation to your broker. You will have to fund that in cash. So a $1m investment in GME — promising a maximum $1m return — would require $15m of margin, if the stock rallied ''even to historical levels''. This is scary gearing for an uncertain future.


By contrast, putting on a short position at $15 — a price at which GME had not exceeded in twenty years — gears things the other way. To lose just one times your investment, GME would need to go to $30. To lose 15 times, it would need to go to $225 — a seemingly outlandish price. Of course


{{sa}}
{{sa}}
*[[GameStop]]
*[[GameStop]]
*[[Outside trading]]

Revision as of 05:37, 15 August 2022

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Bottom of the range
/ˈbɒtəm ɒv ðə reɪnʤ/ (n.)
All other things being equal, a dangerous place to play. We have looked elsewhere at the travails of Melvin Capital Management LP when it tried to short GameStop, but this points to a general proposition: if your strategy involves prices staying low, or going lower, your arse is hanging out if you invest at the “bottom of the range” of plausible prices.

GameStop and the outsider traders

An equity cannot have a negative value — not even one as ropey as GME — so there is a natural limit to how much you can make by shorting it: your purchase price. The lower that price, the less, in absolute dollars, you can make by shorting a single share (but the more shares you can afford to buy!!!). This is where the significance of the range comes in: if the stock is already low against its historical range, and low in absolute terms — as, by 2019, was GME — there is only so much further it can go: if Melvin put on its short at $1.00, it stood to gain at most $1 per share. But it is hardly outlandish to suppose a stock could return to points higher in its range: after all, it has been there before. The stock might seem in terminal decline, but look: things can change. Even without the mendacious activities of the Reddit outside traders, it wasn’t crazy that GME could go back to $15.00 per share. Even this kind of move would be crippling: Unlike a “long” position, a short sale requires you to borrow — not a fixed amount of cash, but the prevailing value of security you are shorting. Since you don’t have that stock — you sold it short — if it rises, so will your margin obligation to your broker. You will have to fund that in cash. So a $1m investment in GME — promising a maximum $1m return — would require $15m of margin, if the stock rallied even to historical levels. This is scary gearing for an uncertain future.

By contrast, putting on a short position at $15 — a price at which GME had not exceeded in twenty years — gears things the other way. To lose just one times your investment, GME would need to go to $30. To lose 15 times, it would need to go to $225 — a seemingly outlandish price. Of course

See also