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by laichzeit0 3417 days ago
It would have to fall more than that to make up the interest they're paying on the shares they borrowed as well as brokerage fees.
1 comments

With current interest rates, it wouldn't have to fall much more, but yes. Plus opportunity cost, and a return to compensate for the risk [1], etc.

[1] It's very risky to short a stock as you can end up losing a very large amount of money, as stocks can increase many times in value. When holding a stock, your risk is finite, as it can only lose 100% of it's value. When shorting, the stock can double or triple in price.

> With current interest rates,

Borrowing costs for TSLA stock have been over 20% annualized (I don't know the current situation).