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CFDs are leveraged products. CFD trading may not be suitable for everyone and can result in losses that exceed your deposits, so please ensure that you fully understand the risks involved. CFDs are leveraged products. CFD trading may not be suitable for everyone and can result in losses that exceed your deposits, so please ensure that you fully understand the risks involved.

What is short covering and how does it work?

Short covering is a key part of a short-selling strategy, in which you attempt to profit from stocks or other markets falling in value. Here, we explain the details of short covering with an example of how it works.

Short covering Source: Bloomberg

What is short covering?

Short covering is a specific step in a short-selling strategy. It refers to the act of buying back borrowed stock to return it to a lender. In doing so, you’ve covered your short position, and you’ll be able to meet your obligation to return the stock.

How does short covering work?

To understand how short covering works, you’ll need to learn the different steps of a short-selling strategy. Let’s go through those steps now.

First, you’d borrow shares from a lender – often a broker or a market maker. Second, you’d sell them on the open market to get cash. Third, you’d use the cash to buy the shares back and to them to the lender. Step three is the short covering part of a short-selling strategy.

You’d keep the difference between the price at which you sold the borrowed shares and the price for which you bought them back as profit. But, if the shares had increased in value, the difference between the price at which you sold the shares and the higher price at which you bought them back would be your loss.

Learn more about how to short sell stocks

What is short interest?

Short interest can show what the current market sentiment is for a company’s stock. It’s taken as the total number of shares that have been sold short, but which have not yet been covered or closed – expressed as a percentage.

A high short interest indicates that investors are currently pessimistic, while a low short interest indicates the opposite. Any sharp changes in a stock’s short interest can also be an indicator that a market could turn bearish or bullish, depending on the current trend.

To calculate short interest, divide the number of a company’s shares that have been sold short by the total number of shares outstanding and multiply the outcome by 100. For example, a company with 20 million shares outstanding, of which 2 million have been sold short, has a short interest of 10% ([2 million ÷ 20 million] x 100).

Short covering example

As a short covering example, let’s suppose that you thought the price of company XYZ’s stock was going to fall.

The stock is currently trading at £20 a share and you borrow 100 shares. You sell the shares, which gives you a cash stack of £2000 (£20 x 100).

In the next week or so, the price of stock XYZ falls to £15, and you buy them back. This is the short covering part of the process, and you now have the shares back in your position to return them to the lender.

In this scenario, you’ll have the original 100 shares, bought for £1500 (£15 x 100), and once they’re returned to the lender, you’ll be able to keep the £500 difference between the sell and buy prices as profit (£2000 - £1500 = £500).

Short covering

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