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Long vs short: betting on a stock going up or down

Two directions, two very different risk profiles โ€” and why one of them can wipe you out without a ceiling.
Written & fact-checked by the StupidGames editorial team Last updated: June 2026 About the team
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Every trade is a bet on direction. Going long means you think the price will rise. Going short means you think it will fall. The two sound symmetrical, but they're not โ€” one has a hard floor on your losses, and the other has no ceiling at all. Understanding that asymmetry is the difference between a calculated bet and a catastrophe.

Going long: the normal way

Going long is what most people mean by "investing." You buy an asset and hope it goes up; you profit on the difference when you sell. If you buy a stock at $20 and it rises to $30, you've made $10 a share. Your maximum loss is capped: a price can only fall to zero, so the worst case is losing what you put in.

Going short: betting on the fall

Short selling flips the order of operations: you sell first and buy back later. Mechanically, you borrow shares from your broker, sell them at today's price, and aim to buy them back cheaper to return them โ€” keeping the difference. Short a stock at $20, buy it back at $12, and you've made $8 a share (minus borrowing fees).

The fatal asymmetry

When you're long, the most you can lose is 100% โ€” the stock goes to zero. When you're short, the stock can go to $40, $400, $4,000; there is no upper limit on how high a price can climb, so there's no limit on your loss. A short that goes wrong can cost you far more than you ever put in.

What a short squeeze is

If a heavily shorted stock starts rising, short sellers rush to buy shares to cap their losses. But buying to cover pushes the price up โ€” which forces more shorts to cover, which pushes it up further. This feedback loop is a short squeeze, and it can send a price vertical in days, as the world saw with certain "meme stocks."

Why guessing direction is so hard

In the short run, prices react to news, sentiment, and crowd psychology as much as fundamentals. Being right about a company and wrong about timing can still lose you money โ€” especially when you're short and the clock (and borrowing costs) work against you. Calling "up or down" on the next move is closer to a coin flip than most traders admit, which is the entire premise of Long or Short: make the call fast, and learn how quickly a 50/50 bet humbles you.

Key takeaways

This is general education, not financial advice. Trading involves real risk of loss.

Sources & further reading

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