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If a companies shares are dramatically reduced in price by shorting of the stock. Then it impacts the companies loan book and banks can call-in loans and this can mean the end of the company. Other companies seeing the fall in price of the company may not wish to trade, suspecting a hidden problem, where in fact one does not exist. In my view this is an unacceptable face of capitalism.
Halifax Bank of Scotland was saved by a takeover by Lloyds TSB after suffering severe shorting of their stock. They are a profitable company.
You didn't answer my question, HBOS was not driven out of business it was taken over. Name 1 company that has gone out of business (eg Lehman Brothers) due to shorting and not their own balance sheet. If a company takes out a loan that depends on stock price they have only themselves to blame when things go wrong (as they surely do). You seem to have cause and effect backwards, companies going out of business causes shorting, shorting doesn't cause companies to go out of business.
I think the "unacceptable face of capitalism" is that you have lost money and want ot blame anyone except for yourself. This not not suprising given it is human nature to take credit when things go well but not when they go bad.
Hi, with all due respect, it is easy to ask questions, however, I can choose to answer in the way i decide to. If you don't like my answers or lack of them, then, so be it.
See the US Bank index had the largest fall in HISTORY last night.
WITHOUT short selling. :bonk::eek3::screwy::bad:
Basically correlation and causation are confused.
Exactly freddy!It's even easier to make unsubstantiated claims like "shorters have forced companies out of business".
Like I said it is just human nature to blame the shorters and for politicians to take advatantage of this. Humans see X (shorting) followed by Y (company out of business) and assume X causes Y when in fact it is Z (risky behaviour/ over leveraging/dodgy accounting) that cause X and Y. Basically correlation and causation are confused.
The stock lending loophole changed all that. Hedge funds found they could borrow stock, not just in the approved companies, sell it and not have to reveal a thing. Even better, they could borrow more than the 10 per cent limit and create a run. And the beauty of the scam was that other investors, seeing massive selling, jumped on board thinking someone must know something they don't.
This article shows the causation factor ...
http://business.smh.com.au/business...tale-of-shortselling-super-20080328-227c.html
So there we go, the cause and effect. Worse is super funds lending our stock to short.
This article shows the causation factor ...
So there we go, the cause and effect. Worse is super funds lending our stock to short.
Now that would make sense to legislate against. If super is a long-term investment, why are managers allowed to beef up annual returns by lending out stock to hedgies and the like? Makes no sense to me.
Thinking, thinking, thinking. All will be revealed in the fullness of time.
So maybe the problem is not short selling per se, but a failure to close a loophole by regulators.
“Short selling ...It's a legitimate trading technique that adds liquidity to a market”
Stock lending makes perfect sense for long-term holdings. Who cares about a little bit of price fluctuation, even if negative, in the short term when the price of a stock in 10+ years is determined by the underlying business (ie earnings). In fact if you want to buy more shares the lower prices caused by the shorters will be good for you.
Why do it though? It's window dressing for fund manager performance. If they are long-term holders of stock, then go long.
Why do it though? It's window dressing for fund manager performance. If they are long-term holders of stock, then go long.
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