Other than trying to dodge taxes as @RobertMorse stated, I can see one other purpose for simultaneously holding a stock both long and short. If a stock has very few shares available to short, and you expect a major announcement, after market close, that could drastically move the stock price (such as earnings or an FDA drug approval/rejection), it could be beneficial to have shares long that could be sold instead of trying to borrow shares to short. This is a way to play the announcement with the only risk being trading commissions if there is no price movement.
Here is it, folks! Enjoy!I think I just found another good reason...Must first test it though... More later...
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Trading platforms show the net which is required so the broker can do a regulatory check to see if the stock requires a locate or is Threshold.
I had never heard of threshold securities, and had to Google it. How does your statement apply if the OP has already shorted the shares using a different brokerage account than the long shares?
Other than trying to dodge taxes as @RobertMorse stated, I can see one other purpose for simultaneously holding a stock both long and short. If a stock has very few shares available to short, and you expect a major announcement, after market close, that could drastically move the stock price (such as earnings or an FDA drug approval/rejection), it could be beneficial to have shares long that could be sold instead of trying to borrow shares to short. This is a way to play the announcement with the only risk being trading commissions if there is no price movement.
Here is it, folks! Enjoy!:
Imagine you have a CoveredCall in your account. A CoveredCall consists of course of a LongStock plus a ShortCall.
Then some time later you see an opportunity to short the stock. If the short order gets a fill then it would
mean closing the LongStock-part of the CoveredCall, which of course was not intended!
Voila!
There you have a good reason to allow "Buy to open" and "Sell to open" also for stocks! Q.E.D.![]()
Here is it, folks! Enjoy!:
Imagine you have a CoveredCall in your account. A CoveredCall consists of course of a LongStock plus a ShortCall.
Then some time later you see an opportunity to short the stock. If the short order gets a fill then it would
mean closing the LongStock-part of the CoveredCall, which of course was not intended!
Voila!
There you have a good reason to allow "Buy to open" and "Sell to open" also for stocks! Q.E.D.![]()
Other than trying to dodge taxes as @RobertMorse stated, I can see one other purpose for simultaneously holding a stock both long and short. If a stock has very few shares available to short, and you expect a major announcement, after market close, that could drastically move the stock price (such as earnings or an FDA drug approval/rejection), it could be beneficial to have shares long that could be sold instead of trying to borrow shares to short. This is a way to play the announcement with the only risk being trading commissions if there is no price movement.
If long in brokerage 1 and short in brokerage 2, each other broker would have no idea. You would have a higher margin requirement in both, possible buy-ins on the short stock, possible overnight charges on the short stock and possible interest on debit balances for the long stock.