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'Beyond GameStop, AMC, Nokia and Blackberry have also seen a retail mob rallying their prices up'

We visibly avoid very low priced stocks for the excessive speculative nature these may attract. Not all brokerages have fractional shares. This does rally up low priced penny stocks during speculative behaviour, says Nigam.

January 31, 2021 / 09:04 IST
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Source: Reuters

Traditional investors make money by buying low and selling high. Short-sellers make money by selling high and buying low - in that order.

A short bet is when you believe that a stock is overpriced and its value should correct (and fall). If you think so, you will borrow it from someone who owns the stock and sell it in the market. When it falls, you can repurchase it and give it back to the lender of the stock.

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This phenomena is bittersweet and can be very risky. The most amount you can make is the value you sold it at (shorted it at). This would happen if the stock price went to zero.

However, if the stock rallies, your losses are uncapped. If you shorted it at Rs. 100 / share, you can only make a maximum of Rs. 100 when it goes to zero. If it rallies and heads to say Rs. 400 / share, you have a loss of Rs. 300.