gekkosluvchild
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Taken from the IG dma trading manual ;
''If you short sell a stock and the underlying share becomes
unborrowable, meaning that we are unable to hedge
against possible losses, your order will be closed at the
market level. A share may either be unborrowable from the
outset or our brokers or agents may recall from us a stock
that we have already borrowed against''
So if you have a short-sell open (CFD or Spreadbet) and the underlying share becomes ''unborrowable'', how common is it for the CFD or SB providers to close you out of your position ?
It seems most of the small caps with IG are usually ''unborrowable'' along with many FTSE 250 shares. Also , say you are long an small cap AIM share and a bear raider targets it forcing stop losses to be hit causing a massive drop in the share price.
Whats the chance of the SB company closing you out of your position even though you had no stop loss ?
Cheers
''If you short sell a stock and the underlying share becomes
unborrowable, meaning that we are unable to hedge
against possible losses, your order will be closed at the
market level. A share may either be unborrowable from the
outset or our brokers or agents may recall from us a stock
that we have already borrowed against''
So if you have a short-sell open (CFD or Spreadbet) and the underlying share becomes ''unborrowable'', how common is it for the CFD or SB providers to close you out of your position ?
It seems most of the small caps with IG are usually ''unborrowable'' along with many FTSE 250 shares. Also , say you are long an small cap AIM share and a bear raider targets it forcing stop losses to be hit causing a massive drop in the share price.
Whats the chance of the SB company closing you out of your position even though you had no stop loss ?
Cheers