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Warrior Trading // Ross Cameron // Day Trade Warrior
Before we continue...👀
💰Remember, day trading is risky and most traders lose money. You should never trade with money you can’t afford to lose. Prove profitability in a simulator before trading with real money.
❗❗My results are not typical. We do not track the typical results of past or current customers. As a provider of trading tools and educational courses, we do not have access to the personal trading accounts or brokerage statements of our customers. As a result, we have no reason to believe our customers perform better or worse than traders as a whole.
❌Do not mirror trade me, or anyone else. Mirror trading is extremely risky https://www.warriortrading.com/why-mirror-trading-is-a-bad-idea/.
🍏 All of the content on our channel is for educational purposes only. No data, content, or information provided by Warrior Trading, the Site, or the other products and services of Warrior Trading, is intended, and shall not constitute or be construed as, advice or any recommendation to buy, sell or hold a particular security or pursue any particular investment strategy.
✔️If you don’t agree with those terms and our full disclaimer (https://www.warriortrading.com/disclaimer), you should not continue watching our videos.
Still with me?
Now let’s dig into some helpful information …
What’s my story? ✏️ You can read it here: https://www.warriortrading.com/ross-cameron/
And check out my broker statements here 📝 https://www.warriortrading.com/ross-camerons-verified-day-trading-earnings/
Our website is filled with free info 🔎 Start with this guide, no opt-in required: https://www.warriortrading.com/day-trading/
Learn about my stock selection process, how I determine entries/exits, my strategy, and more in my free class 💻 Register here: https://www.warriortrading.com/free-day-trading-class/
#daytrading #warriortrading #rosscameron #stocks #learntotrade
Warrior Trading // Ross Cameron // Day Trade Warrior
What's up everybody? All right? So today we're going to talk about short selling. Traders often ask me a question, what is short selling and how do I Short stocks? All right. So today we're going to go into day trading terminology and the term short selling. Now this also is going to require understanding a few other terms.
So I'm going to walk you through those and we're going to jump right in here. All right. So to start with short selling is the very simple process of selling a stock and then buying it back at a lower price. Now most of us we've got a long bias on the market.
That means we look at the market and we see a stock and we want to buy it and sell it for a higher price. Well, you can do just the opposite. You can sell a price, sell a stock high, and then cover it. Buy back that position at a lower price.
You sell high. You buy low. You can trade the market both directions, which is a really cool thing. But there are a few reasons why the market is structured to be long biased.
So it's kind of like a house advantage. I Think there's a long advantage when you're trading the market, and it's just because of a few regulations in a few ways that shorts are structured alright. so we're going to go into that. But first, you need to understand that to short sell, you need a margin account.
There are two types of accounts that you can open. When you set up an account with a broker, you could have a cash account, or you can have a margin account. Now in the cash account, you fund the account with ten thousand dollars and you've got ten thousand dollars cash in that account. Now, when you buy a stock, let's say, for eight thousand dollars and sell it, you not have to wait three days for that transaction to settle before you can trade with that money again.
Now, when you apply for a margin account, it's an agreement between you and the broker and they're going to say, you know what? Yes, that trade is going to take three days to settle, but we're going to go ahead and let you keep trading with your ten thousand dollars because we know you're good for all, right? So you don't have to wait settlement periods. you can start trading right away, and you can also borrow money from the broker. Now, when you trade on, you know on margin or where you're trading. While positions are meddling, you essentially already are borrowing money from the broker.
But when you start shorting stocks, you're going to be selling a position that the broker has. You sell shares that they have and you're basically selling it and then later you buy back and pay them back. So to start short selling, you need to have a margin account. As a day trader, we already use margin.
We need margin because it's what allows us to trade 10 times a day, Even if you only have a thirty thousand dollar balance, you could trade 300,000 or 400,000 dollars worth of stock in a single day. And that's thanks to having a margin account. All right. So short side trade or short selling. These are traders who are bearish on the market. They look at the market and they look for stocks that they think are really extended to the upside and need to reverse. They need to come back down. So when you short when you take a short position, what you're doing is you're creating a negative share balance.
All right. So I'm going to show you what that looks like here. Basically what it means is that if you short a thousand shares, you're going to show up as in your in your positions as having minus 1000 shares. That's the same as when you buy a stock and you have plus a thousand.
When you short a stock, you're going to have minus a thousand. All right. So let me show you here. This is our fantasy stock traders simulator.
so we're going to do let's do a sprint here. Alright, so a thousand shares if I buy a thousand shares right? And let me just do this with a hockey I Buy a thousand shares right? I'm long 1,000 I Go ahead and sell it I'm breakeven now I go ahead and short and now I've got minus 1,000 shares so I can trade the market both directions. I'm not restricted to only trading one direction, only trading to the long side and that makes us much more agile as day traders. Now, there are often times my primary strategy for shorting stocks is to look for stocks that are really extended to the upside and then take the reversal.
take the short waiting for the stock to come back to equilibrium. So I'm looking for those big extensions and I find them using these stock scanners right here. So let's look at Autodesk We traded this one yesterday. This is a stock that was really extended and you can see this was a good reversal.
even today. you have this many consecutive green candles. so this is let's see: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13 consecutive green candles. You know, just statistically, this is just a matter of odds that the more consecutive green candles you have, the higher the likelihood that the next one will be red, right? So this is where a short seller would start to think: okay, I'm going to take a short position and maybe I'll take it on the first candle to make a new low.
If you take it on the 5-minute chart, you'd be short at 80 67 and you would cover that position on the move down here towards 80 13. So that's like a $600 winner. With you know, a thousand shares on the one-minute chart, some traders will take an entry for the first candle to make a new low and you can see that would have been right here. Pretty easy entry at 8086 and then you get that move back down to E 41 and then further down from there again.
quick. Four hundred dollars. Where The thousand shares? That's the power of short selling. Now, Although you can do this on an intraday chart, you can also do it on daily charts depending on your strategy.
And so here we'll see the stock. D Ry S This is a stock that went literally from four dollars a share to over a hundred dollars a share in four trading sessions. Now, this also exemplifies the risk of shorting because if you shortened shares of this, write down here. You know if this could get very painful very fast, this could have been a $100,000 loss. And that's the thing with a shorting. Your losses are limitless because if this did go up to $100 or $200 a share and you're still short eventually you need to cover the position, right? Your broker is going to say you need to cover this position and the only way to do it is to buy. Now you have to buy the thousand shares. So if you've got to buy them back at you know, $500 a share.
it doesn't really matter. Whatever it is is what it is. So the risk when you're trading to the long side is that the amount of money you've paid to buy that stock is the total amount that you could lose. So a thousand shares of a four dollar stock? It's Four thousand dollars.
The maximum amount you can lose on the shore is unlimited. That's important. and this right here. This move on Dr.
Ys exemplifies the fact that if you start shorting early, there are people that shorted this in the 20s, in the 30s, in the 40s, and they got squeezed all the way through this push. This is the type of move that can destroy a beginner trader who doesn't understand risk management. So short selling is an important concept to understand, but you always have to come back to managing your risk on every single trade you take. All right.
So now we jump back here into the slides. What you can see is that when you short right, you create that negative balance. so you sell the shares before you own them, and then you buy back to cover. So what you're doing is you're borrowing shares from your broker and you'll probably hear short sellers talk about this.
Oh man. I didn't have any shares available to borrow, right? You have to borrow them from your broker, but some brokers don't have shares of every stock available. In fact, brokers never have shares available of IPOs, right? A stock that does its initial public offering is almost never available for shorting, but even stocks that have been traded for years and years And years Some brokers does just simply don't have shares available to borrow. So when you're a short seller, you're limited to shares that you can find.
And that's why a lot of short sellers will end up funding 2, 3, 4, or even 5 brokerage accounts, hoping that between the 5 of them, they'll be able to find shares to borrow of almost every stock out there all right now. Once you've created your short position, which is simply by pressing the sell button, you're now negative shares. Well, what you have to do is you at some point have to close that position. We closed that position by covering.
Alright, so to close a short position, you cover your position, you're buying back shares, and you're basically repaying the broker. You cover the position, and you give back the shares that you borrowed to the broker. Now, like, alongside a trader, you can cover in small increments. You don't have to cover all at once. If you're up a thousand dollars, you can cover half of the position and hold the rest for a bigger move, cover another corridor, etc. etc. But you will have to cover the position. now.
You also have a limited number of days before you will be forced to cover the position, and this again is one of these. This is remove the first example of why the market is structured towards long side trading and not short selling. There's no restriction on the number of days you can hold the stock to the long side when you buy it, but there are a number of days that you can only hold a stock. When you're shorting it, those are the days that you have to cover it.
So days to cover these could be 7 days, 14 days, 20 days, 30 days. It's a period of time and if you have not covered your position by that date, the broker can do it manually and they'll charge you a liquidation fee. Now when you're a long biased trader and you're trading a stock and it's just kind of, you know, trending up, moving up, Moving up we could look at Bank of America. You know you can just stick with it and let's say you're in a stock that's been moving down for a while.
Well, you could also stick with it and you can continue to add the lower price and you reduce your average. Let's say you bought this stock at $16 thinking it would bounce right back. Well, it comes down to 15. You're still holding it.
so maybe you add another 500 shares. You reduce your cost right? Reduce your average cost. Well, it drops down more down to 12 and 13. Whatever you can add more, add more and what you're doing is you're reducing your average price.
You're increasing your position. This isn't something that I that I ever do. But let's just say for the sake of argument that you're doing this well. You don't have a limited number of days that you could hold this position.
You can hold it for years if you want. All right, if it takes a years for it to bounce back up and go back into the green, you can hold through that. The same is not true for short selling. So let's say someone shorted this stock at $16 Well here we are.
You know, three weeks later up at $22 and they're down sick. Secondly, right. And the thing is, they can't just keep holding and holding and holding. At a certain point, the days to cover is going to expire and they're going to need to cover that position.
And that's when in this case they'd be taking the loss. Now, it's also important to understand short interest. All right. Short interest refers to the total number of shares that are currently being held as short positions against the stock. So let's say a company. They did their initial public offering and it was a 10 million share. IPO So they have a float of 10 million shares. Let's say 1 million of those shares are being held short.
That stock has a short interest of 10 percent. When a stock is a short interest of 30 percent, 40 percent, or 50 percent, you can see some huge squeezes. This happens because so many people are short the stock that if it starts moving up, those people are going to be forced to cover. So let's just say, for instance, this stock had 50 percent short interest.
50% of the people holding this stock are now down. You know, suddenly, 20, 30 percent whatever might be and they're going to start covering. Well, how did they cover their position? They cover by pressing the Buy button right? And that means you're going to have lots of people pressing the buy button that's going to make the stock go up even more. All right.
So that's what creates that short squeeze. It creates a parabolic move. and we've seen stocks that just go almost straight up like we just saw. DR Why is that example I showed you? but we've seen it on on many stocks with Hmn.
Why? this is another one that went parabolic. You know all of a sudden you start to get that squeeze. Let's see what's that other one. RGS See, this is a stock that over the course of two days, ran from a dollar eighty six to eight dollars, right? That right? There is an opportunity, right? But this is also a place where short sellers would have gotten smoked.
Now they have their redemption on the backside, right? So once the stock put in, the top is starting to give confirmation of the reversal, they have an opportunity to make that same profit coming right back down. So this shows you can trade the market on both sides, both to the upside into the downside. All right. So now you understand days to cover, and you understand short interest.
Well, that short interest is what creates the short squeeze. All of the buying, lots and lots of buying stocks moving up and you get this massive imbalance between the buyers and the sellers. And we know that stocks move based on supply and demand. So stocks that are going to be really, really primed for a short squeeze are going to be stocks that have two things.
One is a low float, meaning the number of shares available to trade is less than 100 million shares, and stocks that have a float of 5 million or 10 million shares can be absolutely explosive. Those are the ones that can move fifty to a hundred percent in a single day, But it's only when they have the second criteria, which is a catalyst. Some type of news, Some type of news that catches all the short sellers off-guard right? The company that you thought was doomed with bankruptcy Everyone had a short bias on it. It's dropping, dropping, dropping.
suddenly. they get, you know, a huge twenty million dollar order that just really turns things around. Something like that can be all it takes for the momentum to shift, and when it shifts, it can move very, very quickly. Now, it's also important to understand short sale restriction, and this is another one of those areas where the market is really biased towards long side trading. There's no such thing as a long side restriction, but there is a short sale restriction. When a stock drops 10% or more in a single day, short sale restriction will be turned on, and that means a short seller cannot just mark it into the stock. They can only short when the stock is moving up or when it's giving an uptick. Sometimes it's called the uptick rule, so that means you can't have people just hammering the stock down.
That helps prevent flash crashes, which is certainly good, but again, when a stock is squeezing up, there's nothing to prevent long biased traders from hitting market orders and just squeezing these stocks up. So this shows us that there really is this sort of institutional bias towards long side trading. All right. So the house Advantage feels like, to me, at least that it's on the side of the bowls all right.
Now, The important thing to realize here with short sale restriction is that stocks that have short sale restriction turned on are going to be harder to short. That means if we have a stock, for instance, that dips down 10% when the market opens and then squeezes up 40% Even if people want to short it, it's going to be harder for them to shore to even though it's squeezing up because you have short sale restriction turned on and that can fuel that parabolic move. Because people that maybe do think it's extended are going to have a hard time getting there short. Now a couple other terms that are important to understand: Cost, average dollar cost averaging and averaging up or averaging down.
so your average cost. This is the price you pay for a stock, whether you're long or short. So let's say you buy a stock at $10 or let's say you short a stock at $10 You're short a thousand shares, Ten dollars and then you short another thousand shares at $9 Your average cost is 950 right now. Dollar cost averaging In that example, I was showing you where someone was adding as the stock was going down.
That's a strategy used oftentimes by investors. It's not really used by day traders. So the strategy there is. well, let's just say I put $20,000 into the market each month.
I put in 20,000 here I put in 20,000 here. 20,000 here. 20,000 here. So yeah, sometimes the markets up when you put in the money, sometimes it's down, but over the long haul, you're going to end up having having an average cost.
So your average cost is going to be somewhere in the middle and that helps buffer out some of the big moves up and the big moves to. the downside. Now averaging up, we're averaging down I Avoid averaging down at all costs if I'm in a bad position. whether it's a long position or a short position I don't add more money to it, right? So if I got into a stock and I'm down $1,000 I had two options. One is that I sell and take the thousand dollar loss. The other option is that I double my position now I'll still be down $1,000 but if the stock goes up just halfway to my entry, I'll be a break-even So let's say it took a thousand shares and the stock drops from $10 to $9 and I'm long. Well, if I double to 2,000 shares, my average is now 950. Which means when the stock comes back up to 950, I'm breakeven instead of down $500 But of course, if it drops to 850, I'm now down a lot more right? the loss has gotten bigger.
I'm now down $2,000 And that's the risk with averaging down. The best trades work out pretty much immediately, and the worst trades? Well, your read on them pretty much immediately. So if your read on the trade, you already know it's not going to be one of your best trades ever. So the decision to add more money to that position really is just adding more risk to a bad situation.
The better thing for me and I've always felt this way is to cut the loss and then look for a better opportunity because you also have the opportunity cost. When you tie up your money and your energy into a bad position. It keeps you from finding the next good position, the next good trade. So you can see this is a stock that you know made the move from $2 to $8 and then right back down.
I'm sure there are traders who you know on the short side, got squeezed into the move up and on the long side you know got buried on the move down. So it's just a matter of understanding your risk. On every trade, you have your max loss and you follow it. That's especially important when you're a short seller because the fact that your losses can be unlimited.
Now that's especially true when we're talking about these stocks that can move 300, 400, 500 percent in a single day traders with small accounts. Once one move like this can wipe out your whole account. that's the importance of having stops knowing your max loss and following the rules. Being successful at trading.
It's really not that hard. it's just a matter of understanding the rules that have to be in play. Following those rules on every single trade. If you can do that, you can come out on the other side profitable day after day.
Alright guys, so I hope this has been a helpful explanation of short selling. If you have any questions, please feel free to email me Ross at Warrior Trading Comm. Hey guys! I Also want to remind you to subscribe to our YouTube channel. You can click by subscribing that way you can get alerts when I upload new videos like my teaching you had a day trade video or the video right? Turn a thousand dollars into eight thousand Six Hundred dollars in one month! Thanks guys!. .
Really great video. I am new and been watching your videos taking notes.
You are the goat Ross. Thanks for making this information so accessible 🙏
When we buying, we are already in loss. If we buy a 1000 shares with a range of just a penny, it's already $100 short right there. how much more cash we go for loss management?
Yep, I just sold 10 TSLA that I didn't own @ $1,228.30 and now I'm -10 shares (paper account). Now after a few days when it drops to $150 a share, I'll buy 10 shares to close (cover) and profit $10,783. See how that works? Nothing to it.
Excellent video. Thanks Ross!
Can I borrow 2k worth of shares with a 200 account?
Thank you for sharing great video! but where can you find or know a company had short interest %? Thanks!
Great training Ross and thank you very much!
Hey but we can avoid unlimited loss by putting a stop loss above the short ..
Q= so what is the upside of short selling? Meaning what is profit potential if the stock does go down?
Why do I love the fact that you always have Spotify floating!!!
For real thank you for your training!
Thank you!
Brilliant, again!
Does it mean that you only make profit when you buy
I thought when you buy you win and when you sell you win as long as it goes in the direction of your trade
if you short with the same win/loss ratio as when youre buying stock, is it the same concept?
Thanks.
Baby Novice here with a question…… Can you place a stoploss(stop limit) to buy back the shares that you owe the broker?
I'm falling in love with this, thanks again Ross, great explanation and tips!
I have been watching some Tim Sykes videos and I have to say, I like your teaching style over his. Both of you have great insights, but your presentation and professionalism stand out. Looking forward to watching more videos.
Exellent explination. THANKS
Thank you for uploading this one. I would be grateful if you could explain to me how short selling creates more supply. Thanks Ross
Best video I’ve seen to learn shorting by far great job!
Hey Ross.
Regarding the Short Squeeze and SSR, is my understanding correct, that it is much better (less riskier) for traders, beginners especially, to trade in stocks with SSR?
Cause to prevent from getting caught up with the big whales/sharks move.
Many thanks in advance.
My god I have finally found the Bruce Lee of logical no bullshit training films!…… Now this all makes sense…. Great stuff thanks
Amazing information. You are genuinely helping people.
You should make a Video Game for practicing trading stocks.
Id like to follow you guys and get a great learning approach to this. currently i have never traded, type with two fingers, and live in BC, Canada with what… i think quest trader as a newly created account but not funded yet. please feel free to suggest the best start for me! ill be making this my morning passion as i can already see the fun technical aspect to it… if i dont mess it up. ill be starting off with a 10' laptop and hope to improve setup later on. i got say i keep reviewing on ow to trade and it seems majority of what im watching are videos from Ross. awesome informative stuff for sure! thanks
Thanks brotha. Hey, question: Is there a way to see what the short interest is on a stock, or like I'm assuming, is it something that is more inferred from the market conditions?
It's a funny thing being so new to this and trying to wrap my head around 'selling stock that I don't own'. 0.o
Crazy helpful, thanks Ross!