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  • ISBN13: 9780471710493
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
There are two sides to everything, except the stock market. In the stock market there is only one side–the right side. In certain market conditions, selling short can put you on the right side, but it takes real knowledge and market know-how as well as a lot of courage to assume a short position.

The mechanics of short selling are relatively simple, yet virtually no one, including most professionals, knows how to sell short correctly. In How to Make Money Selling Stocks Short, William J. O’Neil offers you the information needed to pursue an effective short selling strategy, and shows you–with detailed, annotated charts–how to make the moves that will ultimately take you in the right direction.

From learning how to set price limits to timing your short sales, the simple and timeless advice found within these pages will keep you focused on the task at hand and let you trade with the utmost confidence.

How to Make Money Selling Stocks Short

date10 Mar

5 Responses to “How to Make Money Selling Stocks Short”

  1. Miles R. Hoffman
    12:36 pm on March 10th, 2010

    I am a big fan of O’Neil, subscribing to Investors Business Daily as well as the DailyCharts website. I had hoped to get some valuable insights into short selling but I did not. This book did not cost much, but it was not worth the time or the money.

    O’Neil credits his co-author “Gil Morales… undertook the tremendous task of rewriting… this work… originally published… in pamphlet form…”. This book is still a pamphlet, with about 150 pages of charts out of the 192 pages. The meat of the subject boils down to the “short selling checklist”, which doesn’t even fill 2 pages. In essence, short only in a confirmed bear market, shorting former leaders months after they peak.

    Your time and money would be much better spent buying a good book on technical analysis (John Murphy’s books are required reading and he educates you on many indicators to look for when shorting stocks). At least you’d learn that what this book calls “overhead supply” is called resistance (and you’d learn not only to sell resistance but you’d also learn to buy support… but only in a confirmed bull market, and only months after the stock bottoms).

    Miles Hoffman, CFA

    Atlanta

    Rating: 1 / 5

  2. John Forman
    2:48 pm on March 10th, 2010

    William O’Neil is perhaps the one individual responsible for my development as a trader and investor. I consider How to Make Money in Stocks to be one of the most valuable books on stock trading. I cannot say the same for this one. In fact, I found it to be a complete waste of both my time and money. There was not a single new or insightful bit of information in the text. If I could give it 0 stars I would.
    Rating: 1 / 5

  3. L. Masonson
    3:15 pm on March 10th, 2010

    William O’Neil, publisher of Investor’s Business Daily, as well as the author of a handful of highly readable, and very useful investing books, has updated his 1976 original treatise on short selling with the assistance of Gil Morales, Chief Market Strategist for his firm. The book briefly covers the mechanics and rationale for short selling. Selling short is the opposite of buying long. However, many investors are afraid to short because they either think it is un-American or dangerous. Neither premise is correct. If you know what you are doing, have a game plan, have stop-loss rules and monitor the markets daily, the opportunity to make money is there. And the May through October timeframe in 2006 may turn out to be terrific shorting opportunity.

    The first part (27 pages) of this 194-page three-part paperback covers how and when to sell short. Using colorful charts with detailed explanations of the key price and technical market conditions, the authors illustrate the proper timing of the short sale.

    Part II entitled “The Anatomy of the Short Sale,” details the mechanics of a short sale in seven pages. Two page-size charts illustrate the four phases of a short sale and the logic used to known when to pull the trigger.

    Part III is composed of 155 pages of annotated chart examples of different stocks pointing out the stock’s trading characteristics and exact sell point. The chapter includes detailed write-ups of nine stocks and their charts, and hundreds of single page charts with annotations

    Some of the key points made in the book include:

    1. Very few investors know how and when to sell short correctly.

    2. Use daily and weekly charts of a stock’s volume and price.

    3. Use 20 and 50-day moving averages of price and the piercing of these averages by the price.

    4. Best short sales are the biggest winners in the prior bull market

    5. Determination and persistence are required characteristics of a successful short seller

    Overall, this book provides a very basic introductory discussion of short selling which is not totally inclusive of all the information needed to make the sale. Comparing this book to his other books, O’Neil does not provide the same degree of detail or insight. He could have put more emphasis on providing more indepth discussions on the psychology and practice of short selling, as well as show how to use options instead of stocks. An investor considering short selling should become familiar with the market’s internal statistics, sentiment indicators, and technical analysis (e.g., MACD, stochastics, RSI, etc.) before even considering a short sale. Since 50-70% of a stock’s move is dependent on the market’s trend that should be the first item to be determined.

    Rating: 3 / 5

  4. Steve Burns
    3:56 pm on March 10th, 2010

    Bill O’Neal has done a great deal in this brief book (It was originally a pamplet)esplaining the correct time ot sell stocks short. Contrary to popular opinion you should not attempt to sell short at a stocks 52 week high. You first wait for the initial pull back and for the stock to fail on 3 attempted rallies, you should short on the 3rd failed rally, this is the point of proven weakness. O’Neal suggests shorting previous market leaders when they have fallen out of favor.He backs up his teachings with over 120 real historical bar charts showing volume and showing when to short on each one. You can double your chances as a trader by trading both sides of the market. I highly recommend this book to all traders along with all of O’Neal’s other books and Investor’s Business Daily. I am very glad Mr. O’Neal decided to share his research and experience with the general public.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  5. Sam Kouri
    4:36 pm on March 10th, 2010

    Is basically a brief introduction and outline and then many examples. The examples are all mostly from the 2000 decline in the market. So the book outlines a very specific approach and highlights examples that fit that approach.

    Given the cost of the book , I don’t mind having it in my library. So far the best book on short selling was written by Justin Mamis . The book by Kathryn Staley is great as well. The focus there is how to look at the balance sheets and corporate shenanigans. Both these books are not light reading though.
    Rating: 2 / 5

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