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Short selling often sounds confusing to beginners because it flips the natural order of a trade. Normally we buy first and sell later. In short selling, the sequence is sell first and buy later. This reverse order helps traders profit when markets are falling.
This guide breaks down:
Let’s simplify everything step-by-step.
In a regular trade:
You do this when you are bullish.
You use it when you feel a stock price will fall.
Example:
Your profit = ₹150 – ₹120 = ₹30 per share
Short selling allows you to earn money in falling markets.
You may wonder:
“How can I sell something I don’t have?”
Answer:
SEBI — India’s regulatory body — allows short selling, but with strict conditions. That’s why brokers allow you to sell first and buy later.
Selling first is possible because:
This leads us to MIS orders.
MIS = Margin Intraday Settlement
It means:
If you don’t square off your short position yourself, the broker will automatically close your trade to avoid risk.
Let’s assume:
Net position = 0 (intraday only)
₹150 – ₹140 = ₹10 per share = ₹1,000
This is how every short-selling trade works.
No — not if your net position becomes zero.
You sold 100
You bought 100
Net = 0 → No delivery
Only if you buy more than you sold (for example, sell 100 and buy 120) will the extra 20 shares be delivered — depending on whether the buy order was CNC or MIS.
This is where traders lose the MOST.
Example:You short at ₹150
The stock jumps to ₹180
It gets stuck at upper circuit
All buyersNo sellers
You are desperately trying to buy, but no seller exists.
You cannot exit manually.
Market closes.
Your MIS position is still –100.
Now what?
After 3:30 PM:
Suppose the broker buys at ₹170:
You MUST accept this loss because you failed to square off.
This is why short selling is riskier than normal buying.
Short selling is legal in India because SEBI allows it.
However, many countries ban it temporarily during crises.
Examples:
Had India banned it, short selling would become impossible overnight.
✔ Short selling is allowed only intraday
✔ Use MIS orders only
✔ Must square off the position before broker’s auto square-off time
✔ Avoid stocks known for hitting circuits (low volume, operator-driven)
✔ Avoid shorting news-sensitive stocks
✔ Understand auction risks — losses can escalate fast
✔ Use stop-loss without fail
Short selling is a powerful strategy when used correctly, especially in falling markets. But it carries much higher risk than normal buying because:
If you choose to use short selling, make sure you understand:
Handled responsibly, short selling can be an excellent tool for intraday traders.
