Shorting Strategy and Value Investing
How does shorting work?
Shorting strategy has been very popular since the bubble burst
of technology stocks in 2000. Shorting a stock is simply a bet
that the stock price will drop.
An investor can sell a stock he/she does not own by borrowing
shares from brokers. The investor can sell the stock first and
then buy back the shares at later time. The investor can make
profit if the stock price he/she sells is higher than the price
he or she buy back later on.
Shorting Strategy for Value Investors? At appearance, shorting
strategy should work well with most value investors. The core
task of a value investing is to calculate the intrinsic value or
the worth of a stock in order to identify bargain stocks that
are trading at discount to their intrinsic values. If a
successful value investor can buy cheap stocks based on their
intrinsic value, why not just short a over-priced stock? In the
end, method for calculation of intrinsic value is same whether
the stock is overpriced or underpriced.
However, if you read carefully the value investing books from
Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing, you can find
very little information on shorting. We also know that Warren
Buffet himself does not utilize shorting method. So why is
shorting strategy not used by 2 greatest value investors in
history?
Shorting Requires Higher Degree of Diversification
Mutual funds are known to have extremely diversified portfolio
of hundreds to thousands of stocks.
Many successful value investors invest into concentrated stock
portfolio with adequate diversification. In the book Intelligent
Investor Chapter 5 titled "the Defensive Investor and Common
Stocks", Benjamin Graham preached "adequate diversification" of
10 to 30 stocks, but not "excessive diversification". Warren
Buffet was also known to invest into portfolio of less than 20 -
30 stocks for his hedge fund in earlier years and for his firm
Berkshire Hathaway. Charles T. Munger, the second man of
Berkshire Hathaway, and a great billionaire value investor
himself, was also known to make even more concentrated bet than
Warren Buffet when he was alone managing his own hedge fund
before he joined Berkshire Hathaway. My past investment
performance in Blast Investor Real-time Plus newsletter was also
obtained with concentrated portfolio of around 10 stocks as well.
However, this kind of concentrated portfolio common in value
investing world would not have adequate diversification with
shorting strategy. To illustrate this point, I put following 2
hypothetical cases for comparing a typical long-only value
investing portfolio and a short-and-long combined portfolio.
Case 1 - Long Only Value Investing Portfolio
Table 1- Portfolio 1, Long Only Portfolio
Stock Long or Short $ USD for stock position
1 long $10,000
2 long $10,000
3 long $10,000
4 long $10,000
5 long $10,000
6 long $10,000
7 long $10,000
8 long $10,000
A long $10,000
B long $10,000
Total Equity $100,000
Table 1 is fully invested hypothetical portfolio with 10 stocks.
All the 10 stocks are long position of bargain value stocks.
Suppose for the 2 years, 1 to 8 stock price stayed flat with no
gain and no loss, and stock A and B each lost 90% of their value
in the first year, and then not only regained all the losses in
the second year and actually doubled from the original entry
price. Table 2 is performance of portfolio 1 for this 2 years:
Table 2 - Performance of Portfolio 1
Stock Initial Year1 Year2
A $ 10,000 $1,000 $ 20,000
B $ 10,000 $1,000 $ 20,000
Portfolio1 $100,000 $82,000 $120,000
Portfolio1 Performance NA -18% 46,34%
90% of loss in 2 of 10 stocks in portfolio did not kill the 2
year overall performance of portfolio 1. In fact, Portfolio 1
still enjoyed overall 20% gain over the 2 years.
Case 2 - Long and Short Portfolio
Table 3- Portfolio 2:
Long 8 Stocks, Short 2 Stocks
Stock Long or Short $ USD for stock position
1 long $ 10,000
2 long $ 10,000
3 long $ 10,000
4 long $ 10,000
5 long $ 10,000
6 long $ 10,000
7 long $ 10,000
8 long $ 10,000
X short $ 10,000
Y short $ 10,000
Total Equity $100,000
Table 3 is fully invested hypothetical portfolio with 10 stocks.
All 8 stocks (stock 1 to stock 8) are same long position of
bargain value stocks, and Stock X and Stock Y are short
positions. Suppose for the 2 years, 1 to 8 stock price stayed
flat with no gain and no loss, and stock price X and Y each
increased 10 times in the first year, and then not only lost all
the gains in the second year and actually further crashed and
cut in half from the original entry price. Table 4 is
performance of portfolio 2 for this 2 years:
Table 4 - Performance of Portfolio 2
Stock Initial Equity Year 1 Equity Year 2 Equity
X short position $ 10,000 -$90,000 $ 15,000
Y short position $ 10,000 -$90,000 $ 15,000
Portfolio2 $100,000 $ 0 (wipe out) $ 0 (wipe out)
Portfolio2 Performance NA -100% -100%
Although the investor correctly predicted that stock price of X
and Y would drop in 2 years, the first year rise of 10 times in
stock price of X and Y triggered margin call in portfolio 2. The
2 short positions of X and Y wiped out the whole portfolio 2 so
that the portfolio never had a chance to profit in the second
year of dramatic crash of X and Y stock price.
Market Timing and Money Management
Although the above -90% loss and 10 times rise hypothetical
cases are not common, this kind of wild ride in stock market did
happen. A stock price change from $1 to $10 or from $10 to $1
was even less rare in small cap or micro cap market.
A prudent investor certainly can not rule out such possibility
in portfolio management. Long term oriented value investing with
10 stocks can certainly withstand this kind of losses in case 1.
However, the same kind of change would not have chance of
surviving for shorting strategy as shown in case 2.
To avoid wipe out with short strategy, investor has 2 choices:
Investor either has to have a more diversified portfolio,
possibly with hundreds or thousands of stocks just like a
typical diversified mutual fund portfolio.
or Investor would engage in short term trading or market timing
so that the investor can short at or near top to avoid wipe out
risk.
Neither of above 2 choices are attractive for a truly successful
value investor. First of all, concentrated bet without excessive
diversification is one of key reasons for high performance. With
hundreds or thousands of stocks under management, a portfolio
with short strategy would be as mundane as a typical mutual fund
portfolio in terms of performance. Second of all, value
investing method is price oriented long term investing method,
which by itself is at odds with any market timing or short term
trading strategy.
Certainly, there are successful investors utilizing short
strategy in stock market. However, here is my final 5 cents as
below:
Great value investors such as Warren Buffet and Ben Graham do
not short, you don't need to either.