GameStop
Risk Anatomy™
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I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would like to come back as
the bond marketReddit. You can intimidate everybody.
- —James Carville, 1993 (updated by the JC, 2021)
In which the experts in the market got properly schooled by a bunch of daytraders. Acres have been spilled on this elsewhere, but the JC’s own hot takes are these:
- Firstly, everyone knows shorting gives you unlimited upside risk. But there is still this basic supposition that, okay, it’s theoretically unlimited, but practically? — c’mon. There are rational bounds to which no stock can go. Well, we know that not to be the case.
- Secondly, shorting a stock that is at the bottom of its range is a way more risky proposition than shorting a stock that is at the top. GameStop closed at $3.96 on 17 July last year. Imagine shorting a million shares then. Cost? $3,960,000. Maximum return? $3,960,000. Maximum loss, at peak Jan 28? 469,420,000. That’s the thick end of half a billion dollars. Now, consider the same investment at 36
- Practical limit to how far you can ride it: as far as you have cash on hand. The moment you have to raise new capital, you dilute your existing investors into oblivion