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15 Most Shorted Stocks That Are Loved By Analysts

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In this piece, we will take a look at the 15 most shorted stocks that are loved by analysts. If you want to skip our introduction to short selling, then jump ahead to 5 Most Shorted Stocks That Are Loved By Analysts.

Short selling is a tricky game. Rapid share price appreciations can stretch a short seller's budget to the limit and lead to losses that are twice, thrice, or even more higher than the initial investment.

To understand this consider a simple example. Imagine you go short on the shares of Firm A. The stock is currently trading for $10, and you borrow shares at this price and sell them on the market in hopes that the price will fall. Ten shares sold short will be worth $100. However, the firm announces a breakthrough technology and the shares soar to $30. Now, you have to spend $300 to buy back the ten shares and return all of these to book a loss that is three times the original borrowed amount. On the flip side, if you had bought the ten shares with the hope that the share price would appreciate but the shares tanked to $0, then you'd have lost $100 only.

Yet, despite this, shorting stocks is still an important part of the U.S. market. In fact, shorting has helped discover some massive frauds recently. One of the biggest examples is the story of Nikola Corporation (NASDAQ:NKLA). While its shares currently trade for $1.31, they were actually soaring to high levels around $66 in 2020. So, what happened? Well, short seller Hindenburg Research released a report in September 2020 which accused Nikola of manipulating its vehicle tests and engaging in investor fraud. The firm's shares, which were trading at around $34, tanked and have been unable to recover since then. The report also made Nikola's founder and chief executive officer Trevor Milton resign, and the firm has never been the same.

Hindenburg was back earlier this year when it targeted one of India's biggest business groups, the Adani Group. It alleged improper financial practices at the firm, and Adani along with associated companies ended up losing $104 billion in market value. The report also knocked down the group's founder Mr. Gautam Adani several places down the world's rich list, and Adani's shares have still to recover despite 2023 nearing its end.

However, as we mentioned above, short selling is a risky endeavor. A short position going wrong, i.e. the share price appreciating instead of falling is called a short squeeze. A short squeeze causes billions of dollars in losses, and we took a look at some notable squeezes in our coverage of 10 Biggest Short Squeezes of All Time. It shows that one of the biggest short squeezes in history is the one that took place in the shares of Volkswagen AG (OTC: VWAGY), which ended up causing hedge funds $30 billion in losses. Other notable short squeezes include the close to $40 billion in losses that short sellers incurred when going against Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) - whose chief Mr. Elon Musk is known for engaging the short sellers on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter).