noun One who has sold futures contracts or plans to purchase a cash commodity.
verb Selling futures contracts or initiating a cash forward contract sale without offsetting a particular market position. Chicago Board of Trade glossary
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Someone who has sold actuals or futures contracts, and has not yet offset the sale; the act of selling the actuals or futures contracts, absent any offset. The CENTER ONLINE Futures Glossary
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(1) noun - The position of an investor who sells, or commits to sell, a security in either the cash or futures markets. For example, the sale of an interest rate future is a commitment to deliver securities at some future date in exchange for an agreed-upon amount. This is called a short futures position.
(2) verb - The act of selling or committing to sell in the future. American Banker Glossary
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The selling side of an open futures or options contract. The opposite of long. Chicago Mercantile Exchange Glossary
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A term used to describe an open sold futures or options position. Also used to describe someone who sells a cash asset not previously owned. Contrast with long ( long position). Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein financial glossary
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A short position is when someone sells a warrant or the underlying asset. Contrasts with Long position. London Stock Exchange Glossary
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▪ I. short short 1 [ʆɔːt ǁ ʆɔːrt] adjective
1. not having as much of something as there should be or as much as you need:
• Have you all paid me? I'm still about £9 short.
short of
• The insurance fund was running short of cash.
2. be short of stock/be short on stock FINANCE if someone is short of stock, they have sold shares that they do not yet own, believing that the price will fall before the shares have to be delivered
[m0]
▪ II. short short 2 adverb FINANCE
1. if someone sells bonds, shares, currencies etc short, they sell bonds etc that they do not yet own believing that the price will fall so that they can be bought more cheaply before they have to be delivered:
2. go short (on something) to sell bonds, shares, currencies etc that you do not own, believing that their value will fall and that you will be able to buy them more cheaply before they have to be delivered:
• These money managers go short, making bets that certain stocks will decline.
[m0]
▪ III. short short 3 verb [intransitive, transitive] FINANCE
to sell shares that you do not yet own, believing that the price will fall so that the shares can be bought more cheaply before they have to be delivered:
• Many were actually shorting the market, betting prices would fall.
— shorting noun [uncountable] :
• For those with the nerves for it, shorting can be a grand way to make money.
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Investors are 'short' when they sell borrowed assets in the hope that they can buy them back when prices have fallen. A short position is the opposite of a long position, when investors buy assets in the hope that they can sell them when prices have risen.
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Ⅰ.
short UK US /ʃɔːt/ adjective
► [
not before a noun]
be short of sth »
We are very short of staff and if we face a major incident we'll be stretched.
be short on sth »
The Budget was short on announcements about personal taxes.
leave sth short of sth »
The rocky economy has left the state so short of money that it must cut spending.
► [
not before a noun] »
The most common ways of ending an interview are saying that time is short.
»
Those from well-off homes tend to be spendthrift even when money is short.
► short of sth »
The charity raised just short of €7m last year.
► STOCK MARKET »
In a short sale, an investor can sell stock he doesn't own, hoping to buy the shares at a cheaper price later on.
► short for sth »
Ami is short for artificial machine intelligence.
for short »
Keep an eye on Canada's Northern Telecom, Nortel for short.
Ⅱ.
short UK US /ʃɔːt/ adverb
► STOCK MARKET »
The group's conservative growth portfolio isn't allowed to sell stocks short.
»
A popular hedge fund move is to go short.
go short on sth »
Speculators are going short on the Hong Kong dollar.
Ⅲ.
short UK US /ʃɔːt/ verb [T]
► STOCK MARKET »
As many as 27% of the company's shares have been shorted.