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After considerable deep thought *coff* I blame the immediacy of ..... THE INTERNET!!
BAN IT!! [size=+1]BAN IT!!! [/size][size=+2]BAN IT!!![/size] :bounce:
Why wouldn't you want to earn an extra whatever (say 1%) if it doesn't make any difference in the long term? The super funds are still long when lending out the stock, the shorters have to give the stock back at some point in time.
Everyone start pulling your funds out of US, recall all loans and invest them in something else.
That'd knock them down a peg or two.
The only problem I can see here is that they'd want to start a war with us.
No? Where does it come from?Realised gains for super funds doesn't really come from stock price appreciation does it?
What difference does it make?
They'll still write calls, which no-one would have a problem with, yet in reality is a short or at least, negative position.
I'll go for China at this stage but reserve the right to change teams half way through
I thought with this ban on short selling that share was only suppose to go up, obviously not every body has been reading about the new rules
So the question is - do the super companies factor in this risk and does the stock lending fee adequately cover and justify the risk being taken on.
This bit is interesting:Government drafts short-selling legislation Posted Tue Sep 23, 2008 5:00pm AEST
The Federal Government has moved to make the practice of covered short-selling of stocks an offence unless it is reported.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has temporarily banned most forms of short-selling in which investors trade in such a way to profit from a share price decline.
The sooner the better!Corporate Law Minister Nick Sherry says the Government is preparing to lift the ban with the proposed legislation.
Hey?The difference that it makes is counterparty risk. What level of risk management is applied to the risk that the stock cannot be returned because the counterparty that borrowed it goes broke. The reality is that stock lending is a title transfer in exchange for a 'promise' (counterparty risk) to return said stock. The lender has no title any more over the stock that has been lent.
Hey?
If that is the case, how do firms recall lent stock, which they do?
But shorts that are real time mark to market......
Here's one 100 times worse than shorts. Retail broker account being able to trade on T3. There are actual threads on this forum and others of FOOLS daytrading without ANY money!!!
Banning short selling means less liquidity therefore more volatility in share prices. It is reckless policy-on-the-run.
There are worthwhile points to be scored on both sides but shorting, for the most part, is a benefit rather than a hindrance to the market.
It is a killer for the ASX, as well as liquidity in general. In a normal market, short selling accounts for a third of volumes and right now the share would be closer to 50%. Despite the conspiracy theories, shorting is not just about hedge funds ravaging stock prices for their own greedy ends _ though that is a good part of it.
That's a surprise to me too, would like to see accurate figures. I would have been surprised at anything over 10% TBH.Where did they get the statistic that short selling accounts for a third of volume (and currently 50%)?! - its sounds like complete BS to me - short selling wouldn't count for anywhere near this level of volume would it?
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