The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

How to cash in on a stock market crash

Savers should look into the strange, little understood world of short-selling, writes Richard Evans

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Have you watched the film The Big Short? It’s hard not to feel in awe of the small group of investors, led by Michael Burry, who saw the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis coming, realised that it meant property prices would fall and bet against the housing market, making themselves hundreds of millions of dollars.

Could ordinary savers do the same? Could you decide, for example, that inflation is here to stay, or that interest rates will continue to rise, or that the stock market is heading for a fall – and try to profit from your conviction?

A “short” is shorthand for a “short position”, and is so- called because a convention­al investment in an asset, such as a share, is called a “long” position. So, if you have bought shares in Tesco, for example, you are said to have a “long” position in Tesco – or to “be long of ” Tesco.

What, then, does it mean to be “short” of Tesco? A “short” investor in Tesco expects its share price to fall and makes money if it does – the opposite of what happens to an investor who has a “long” position.

There are several ways to take out a short position in a stock or other asset to profit if the price falls.

The traditiona­l option is to borrow the asset from an existing investor and then sell it. If you do this you owe the other investor the assets, not their value in monetary terms. So if I borrow 100 Tesco shares from you and sell them, I must then repay you 100 Tesco shares – irrespecti­ve of what happens to their price.

Let’s say that the price of the asset you borrowed falls after you sold the shares, as you expected.

You then buy enough of the asset in the market to repay the loan at the lower price; the difference between the price at which you sold the shares and the price at which you bought them later is your profit. The problems with this method are that there may be no one willing to lend you the stock in the first place, and that the practice is outlawed in some jurisdicti­ons. As a result, other ways to “short sell” have evolved.

These involve what are called “derivative­s”, because they derive from underlying assets. One method is a “spread-bet”, another is a “contract for difference” (CfD).

In each case you are making a prediction of the price of an asset in the future, and will win or lose according to how good your prediction is.

Unlike borrowing shares or other assets, it’s easy to set up a spreadbett­ing or CfD account; popular providers include IG and City Index. A “put option” is another type of derivative that can be used to short an asset or index.

Another way to short certain assets is via a special type of investment fund geared to the purpose.

“Exchange-traded funds”, or ETFs, normally aim to replicate the performanc­e of a particular index, but some offer returns that are the opposite of those from an index.

So while, for example, a convention­al FTSE 100 ETF simply aims to rise and fall in line with that index, you can also buy an ETF that will gain when the FTSE 100 falls.

An example is the Xtrackers FTSE 100 Short Daily Swap Ucits ETF, which trades on the London stock market under the “ticker” symbol XUKS. To short the American stock market you could buy the Xtrackers S& P 500 Inverse Daily Ucits ETF (ticker XSPS).

HOW TO BE A SUCCESSFUL SHORT- SELLER

You’ll need patience, the willingnes­s to monitor your positions constantly and great conviction in your beliefs which, by definition, will go against the consensus.

This is the opinion of Barry Norris of Argonaut Capital, who runs an investment fund that takes “long” and “short” positions. “Short something you know something about,” he said. “You need to have an informatio­n edge over other investors. Work out what it is and what it will take for the market to come round to your point of view. That may take time, which is why you need patience.”

When it comes to the practicali­ties Mr Norris said you should be diversifie­d and aware of risk.

“I know no one who shorts with just one position,” he said.

“You need risk controls and to take positions of appropriat­e size – you play probabilit­ies like a good poker player. You need to give it your full concentrat­ion.”

Mr Norris said he knew of no way in which private savers can directly short the housing market in the way Michael Burry did, but suggested shorting housebuild­ers or other related sectors as a proxy.

WHAT ARE THE DANGERS OF SHORTING?

The first and most potent danger is that of unlimited losses. If you have a “long” position on an asset – you buy some shares, for example – the most you can lose is the amount you invested.

The potential gain, meanwhile, is unlimited. The position is reversed when you short-sell an asset: the most you can gain is if its value collapses to zero, while your losses are unlimited if it turns out you are wrong; there is no limit, in principle, to the price a share can reach, for example.

This is all the more true if you have used borrowed money to take out a short position, as investors sometimes do. CfDs and spread-bets are regarded as “leveraged” investment­s in the sense that you could lose more than the amount you originally bet.

However, investors regarded as non- profession­al by spread- betting companies cannot lose more than they have in their account with the firm concerned at the time – but this protection does not apply to “profession­al” customers.

For this reason, it’s advisable to use a “stop- loss”, which closes your trade once a certain loss, chosen by you, has been made.

Even if you do not lose more money than you have bet the odds are not in your favour. Spread-betters are obliged to publish warnings about the proportion of customers who lose money, and percentage­s of 70pc or more are common. So, can you do your own “big short?” Not directly on the housing market the way Michael Burry did.

You could use shares in housebuild­ers as a proxy, or bet on inflation.

When it comes to the stock market, it’s far easier to short-sell, via CfDs and so on, and you can use the same methods to bet on commodity prices and foreign exchange rates. Or you can avoid CfDs and the like if you want to bet that common stock market indexes such as the FTSE 100 are going to fall by investing in appropriat­e ETFs.

‘You need to have an informatio­n edge over other investors’

 ?? ?? The film The Big Short focuses on the 2008 housing bubble and crash
The film The Big Short focuses on the 2008 housing bubble and crash

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