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  #21  
Old 04-13-2007, 06:38 PM
RedJoker RedJoker is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: High on Life
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Default Re: Shorting the Online Gaming Stocks

[ QUOTE ]
What's the difference between shorting, and the put options? thx

[/ QUOTE ]

Shorting is the opposite of going long (buying), you are selling shares you don't own and must return them at a later date and hopefully at a lower price. The danger is that the shares skyrocket and you must pay back multiples of the share price. You must also have a margin account to short and run the risk of margin calls, i.e. having your brokerage forcably sell your positions to cover your loses.

A put is an option, it gives you the right but not the obligation to sell shares at a certain predetermined price on or before a predetermined date. You must pay a premium for this. For example let's say you bought a $50 put on company XYZ for $1. The company is trading at $50 at the time. It drops to $45 and you exercise the option, you net $4 [(50-45)-$1 premium]. If the price rises to $55 you would choose not to exercise the option and lose your $1 premium.

Put options are often used as a type of insurance to protect against a stock price falling.
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  #22  
Old 04-13-2007, 08:33 PM
WHoSBeTTaTHaNuS WHoSBeTTaTHaNuS is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Pain tells you you\'re alive
Posts: 246
Default Re: Shorting the Online Gaming Stocks

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
What's the difference between shorting, and the put options? thx

[/ QUOTE ]

Shorting is the opposite of going long (buying), you are selling shares you don't own and must return them at a later date and hopefully at a lower price. The danger is that the shares skyrocket and you must pay back multiples of the share price. You must also have a margin account to short and run the risk of margin calls, i.e. having your brokerage forcably sell your positions to cover your loses.

A put is an option, it gives you the right but not the obligation to sell shares at a certain predetermined price on or before a predetermined date. You must pay a premium for this. For example let's say you bought a $50 put on company XYZ for $1. The company is trading at $50 at the time. It drops to $45 and you exercise the option, you net $4 [(50-45)-$1 premium]. If the price rises to $55 you would choose not to exercise the option and lose your $1 premium.

Put options are often used as a type of insurance to protect against a stock price falling.

[/ QUOTE ]

thank you
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