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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Oversold

Oversell \O`ver*sell`\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Oversold; p. pr. & vb. n. Overselling. ]

  1. To sell for a higher price than; to exceed in selling price.

    One whose beauty Would oversell all Italy.
    --Beau. & Fl.

  2. To sell beyond means of delivery. [Brokers' Cant]

    Oversold market (Brokers' Cant), a market in which stocks or commodities have been sold ``short'' to such an extent that it is difficult to obtain them for delivery.

Wiktionary
oversold

a. (context finance English) A stock or commodity market condition where there has been significant trading driving prices down to lower levels, levels which seem overextended or excessive on a short-term basis.

WordNet
oversold

See oversell

Usage examples of "oversold".

I knew my employer had oversold his holdings, but there would be no trouble in making up the five thousand head, as all our neighbors would gladly turn in cattle to fill the contract.

They oversold us, so now they have to blame us for not living up to a set of expectations they created in the first place.

But as a testimonial to his regime, the Bill of Rights at least had the virtue of being completely typical of John Diefenbaker: it was a well-intentioned, inexplicably delayed piece of legislation, so oversold to the voters that The Bill of Rights 313 eventually most of the beneficial if limited influence it deserved was dissipated.

Utah when a young woman boarded the oversold bus carrying a plastic laundry basket stuffed with shoes and clothing.

Jonathan oversold all his stories, so it was hard to know if this one was truly special.

He had already oversold his self-fixed limit, having parted with four hundred and eleven thousand shares.

Tony had been oversold on the idea that Thull was a human clock, and had therefore talked too much about it, because talking was his weakness.

In each case, the skeptics at the time grumbled that these theories were being oversold and that the results were either wrong or obvious.