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Strategies & Market Trends : DAYTRADING Fundamentals -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: OZ who wrote (8122)4/29/2000 9:28:00 PM
From: Cormac  Respond to of 18137
 
OZ -

I am not having a problem following your logic...agree with it 100%...am just trying to understand where brec is coming from and/or am I missing his basic point

thanks for the clarity and your previous posts bringing up the "style" of trading at your firm...nice, very nice

Regards,

Cormac



To: OZ who wrote (8122)4/29/2000 11:09:00 PM
From: Robert Graham  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18137
 
So according to your formula, as the position moves against you, your exposure goes DOWN? I do not think so. This is what apparently Brec's formula attempts to deal with that yours modification does not. REPLACEMENT cost is the basis for calculating exposure in a short position which involves BORROWED stock. When stock moves up $2,000 for a short position, its replacement cost when up $2,000 from the initial $10,000 purchase. In other words, the stock held as a long position is worth now $12,000, not $8,000. This is what you will have to pay out of your account to cover your position in the stock you have borrowed from that "other" person. They will not accept $8,000 for their stock that went UP $2,000 from the value it had when you borrowed it from them. So Brec's figure of $12,000 is valid for its comparison to the current equity in the account of $18,000.

Just my two cents. :-)

Bob Graham



To: OZ who wrote (8122)4/30/2000 2:40:00 AM
From: atto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18137
 
Cormac:

This I understand...this is a basic understanding of the difference between a long and a short...a long only has a potential loss of the value of the position when bought...whereas a short has unlimited potential (in theory).

OZ
Brec. and I had already agreed to this point from the very beginning. I do not know why Atto is bringing up this more obvious part of the equation

That is not *at all* what I was saying. I was pointing out that even though both accounts in my example lost 100% of account equity, in the long example the risk also gradually decreased until it reached 0, while the risk in the short example increased. Though, clearly I chose the wrong example to simplify things :))

Let's use your example:

Person A

SHORT EXAMPLE
1>A margin account begins with $20,000
2>You short $10,000 and it goes against you $2000.
3>Account equity is now $18,000
4>Value of stock is $12,000
5>Short Position Value $8,000
6>%exposure is now 8000/18000 or 44%

Person B

LONG EXAMPLE
1>A margin account begins with $20,000
2>You Buy $10,000 long and it goes against you $2000.
3>Account equity is now $18,000
4>Value of stock is $8000
5>Long Position Value $8,000
6>%exposure is now 8000/18000 or 44%

Brec, as I understand it, was simply saying that even though both the short position and the long position started as 50% of account equity, the current value of stock is now 44% of account equity in the long example, and 66% of account equity in the short example.

The risk of losing, for example, 20% of your current account equity is equal to the probability that the stock in which you have a position can drop/go up enough to cause that 20% loss. If your position is equal to 100% of your account equity, then the stock has to only drop/go up by 20% of it's current price. If it's equal to 50% then the stock has to drop/go up by 40%. If we are talking about the same stock, then clearly the latter is less likely.

If we are talking about two different issues, then this only changes if you have some information that would cause you to believe that one of the stocks is less likely to drop/go up than the other. The only such information in your example might be the fact that one stock has already lost 20% of it's value, and the other gained 20% (as I said in my previous post). But if this isn't significant, or you don't know what difference this might make, then you have to assume that another drop of 20% (of the share's current price) in your long example is just as likely as a 20% gain in your short example (this is also making the assumption that a 20% drop in the price of any random issue is just as likely as a 20% increase in that same issue, but then, if it isn't, it also wouldn't have been when you originally bought/sold short the stock, so this doesn't change the increase/decrease in risk).

So, in the short example, the value of your stock is now $12,000. Another 20% increase would make it worth $14,400, your account equity would now be $15,600, which means you just lost 13% of the $18,000 in account equity you had before the second increase in price.

In your long example the value of your stock is now $8,000. Another 20% drop would make it worth $6,400, your account equity would be now $16,400, which means you just lost 9% of the $18,000 in account equity you had before the second decrease in price.

Earlier OZ wrote:

SIMPLY STATED: If I hold long 100 shares of a 50 dollar stock and it goes down 10 points it depletes my account capital by (10 x 100) or $1000. And deletes my buying power by $2000. in a margin account. If I am short the 100 shares and the stock goes up 10 points it depletes my account by $1000. and my buying power by $2000.. This 1:1 relationship continues as a 1:1 relationship wether it is a 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50 point gain or loss. All elements of risk and as you said "capital consumption" ARE identical, that is up to the point the long holders stock drops 50 and he cannot lose anymore and the short holder position goes up 50 and his problem can continue to infinity.

Ok, so let's go back to the example at the top of this post, and let's say that the price per share when the stock was originally bought/sold short was $100. After the first increase/decrease the price would be $120 in the short example and $80 in the long example. You are saying that another 20 point loss in the long example and a 20 point gain in the short example would change account equity by the same dollar amount.

That is true, but this would only mean that risk for both positions remained the same if equal point increases/decreases were equally likely regardless of the current price per share. In other words, if a stock with a price of $1,000 per share was just as likely to increase/decrease by 50 points as a $50 stock would be. This is clearly not true, and even though the difference in price per share is smaller ($40) it still makes a second 20 point loss in your long example less likely than a second 20 point gain in your short example (again, assuming neither previous price action nor the choice of either going short or long makes any difference).

atto



To: OZ who wrote (8122)4/30/2000 4:35:00 PM
From: Dan Duchardt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 18137
 
OZ,

As an addendum to my previous reply to Atto, I will add this comment in response to your earlier message. I think you are incorrect in the following assertion:

The problem as I see it is that by using Brec's method the value of the stock ($12,000) is used to compute the Short position value on line 5. In actuality it should be calculated by subtracting the original shorting price (10,000) by the amount loss (2000) to give you the $8,000. figure used on line 5 and 6. Using Brecs method results in 12000/18000 or 67% for line 5 (actually this is line 6). This would be riskier but in actuality if it were true. But it is not because the formula is wrong

Value and exposure are the same in a long position, but not in a short. At the "value end point" in this example, where the value of the short position, as you have correctly defined it, becomes zero, the "exposure" of that position has in fact grown to twice it's original amount. Brec's argument has merit for precisely this reason. Exposure in a short position is the value of the security held short, not the value of the short position in that security.

Dan