Originally posted by DeludedAussie
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A wash trade is something different, and it is buying/selling a security to have a net flat position (no market exposure). And this is definitely a no-no in the USA or on any US exchange. Even if a derivative in use (spread bet) it is considered market abuse as you are changing the market (increasing volume) when there is no net effect. However, the UK is a bit more fuzzy due to the principles based approach. You would probably get away with it if you have never been a market professional and the size was small. What HMRC think of it, who knows. I have been subject to a wash trade investigation on a US exchange before, and getting that first email from a lawyer at the CFTC making an 10 page inquiry is much more scary than HMRC. Nice letter headed paper.
There are a number of other factors of course, as said above how do you know the stock will go up/down? Next, if you are short on a stock even via spread betting the equity curve would surely include the short sale lending fees, and unless you have a broker that gives you all of the lending fees you might get from your long position I suspect you will be leaking cash from the difference. Kinda like borrowing money from the bank at x% and putting it in a savings account and they give you x-y% back.
I would get some serious advice based on the market the shares are in before attempting.
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