Oh, No, Is GameStop Short Selling or Buying a Sin? – Ageless finance (2024)

Why Is Short Selling Normal?

Small investors trying to “squeeze” GameStop short-selling institutional investors was the most interesting story of the last week. Is sort selling something weird, sinful, strange? No.

  • “Normal”, long investment is simple. You buy something to sell it later at a higher price. (Whereby dividends may increase your income). People normally buy something that seems to be cheap, undervalued, to sell it higher. If it becomes expensive, or the valuation gets better.
  • Short investment may be more complicated, but the same. It is only reversed in time: The investors sell something first that they think is too high, expensive, overvalued. Intending to buy it back later at a lower price. The difference is the gain of the investor.

Sort selling has a useful feature, it increases the liquidity of the market. Short sellers are providing more supply of the asset. And also more demand if they buy it back. (Close, liquidate their trades, positions.)

The “Let’s Blame The Short Sellers” Game

Some people say sort selling is harmful because short-sellers may put companies or other investors in trouble. They push prices low, making the market depressed. They hurt companies’ reputations, making it difficult for them to raise capital. Banks may seem less solvent. In an extreme case, entire currencies may crash. (See the story of George Soros and the English pound on Investopedia or The Balance.)

This point of view is often emphasized by politicians and officials, especially in times of crisis. They say short-sellers are pushing down exchange rates, in reality, the crisis does. In times of crashes, they used to ban short selling. In first-line for bank shares. In reality, politicians usually look for scapegoats for the crisis, whom they can blame instead of themselves. And they find it among speculators.

Why (GameStop) Short Sellers Are The Best Buyers

Short sellers are shorting weak assets, mostly when they have fallen already. They may speed up the process but aren’t the cause of it. (It is foolish to short an asset with strong fundamentals. Or buy one with a weak underlying value.) But politicians and other persons blaming short-sellers usually forget that they also raise market prices when they close their short trades. “Short sellers are the best buyers”– states an old saying. Because they must close trades, sometimes at any cost.

But then, in the commodity market, by such a line of thinking, the long investors are the bad guys. After all, with their purchases, they make wheat, bread, meat more expensive, aren’t they? And the poor go hungry because of them. By the same logic, short selling commodity market investors would be the saviors of the poor, pushing food prices down. Why politicians never talk about this?

Why Are GameStop Short Losses So High?

By long trades, you can only lose a certain limited amount of money. Unleveraged, 100 percent–all what you invested. With 2x leverage, 200 percent, with 4x, 400 percent. (See also: 6 Effective and Proven Ways to Lose Your Money.) But by short selling, the losses may be infinite. Let’s suppose you short a stock, like GameStop by $40, with a $100 investment. It surges to $400. You lose $900, 9x, nine times of your investment. If you use a 2x leverage, your loss is already 18-times. And all your winning chance was only 100 (or 200, etc.) percent.

So, the risk-return ratio is terrible. One reason there are many more long buyers than short-sellers.

Stock prices mostly surge in the long term. Brief or extended bear markets happen periodically, but the trend shows upwards. That means, shorting the entire market is often a bad idea in the long term. That may have realized many “old-school” investors last year. The economy is in recession, the crisis is deep, but the stock prices surged after March 2020.

Supposed Wallstreetbets Short Squeeze Targets

Stocks

NameCode
GamestopGME
AMCAMC
NokiaNOKIA
BlackberryBB
Bed Bath & BeyondBBBY
Naked BrandNAKD
Palantir TechnologiesPLTR
iShares Silver TrustSLV
First Majestic SilverAG
Virgin GalacticSPCE

Cryptos and Commodities

NameCode
SilverSI
DogecoinDOGE
VechainVET
MonethaMTH

When GameStop Short Selling and Long May Be a Crime

So long buying or short selling of an asset are both normal. Excepted if these trades are manipulative. And I’m afraid driving the price of a stock from $40 to $400 in days is a deliberate manipulation. Market manipulation is illegal in most countries.

Price Manipulation Is Illegal, Everywhere

Market manipulation is prohibited in most countries, in particular, in the United States under Section 9(a)(2)[1] of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, in the European Union under Article 12. The US Securities Exchange Act defines market manipulation as “transactions which create an artificial price or maintain an artificial price for a tradable security–wrote Wikipedia.

In the EU, “market manipulation shall comprise the following activities:

Entering into a transaction, placing an order to trade, or any other behaviour which:

Gives, or is likely to give, false or misleading signals as to the supply of, demand for, or price of, a financial instrument, a related spot commodity contract. (…) The conduct by a person, or persons acting in collaboration, to secure a dominant position over the supply of or demand for a financial instrument, related spot commodity contracts (…) (Source: Eur-Lex)

GameStop Short Selling Adventure Getting a Nightmare

I do not intend to protect large investors from small investors. I’m sure big institutional investors can be blamed for thousands of sharp price movements in history. Even for many market-manipulations. But pushing market prices in a direction to take money from others is certainly a crime. It has been many decades. (If this were not the case, the capital market would be even more dangerous than it is now.)

Small investor groups paint an image of themselves to be modern Robin Hood. Robbing from the rich and giving to the poor. But in the end, many small investors can get stuck in the highly overpriced stocks they bought and lose a lot of money. This has probably already begun. (GameStop pre-market today: $225, 31 percent fall.)

Bull vs. Bear, Long vs. Short Strategies

Bull (long) strategy

Bear (short) strategy

Buy it now, to sell it later higherSell it now, to buy it later lower
Waiting for price increaseWaiting for price fall
Main forms:Main forms:
Simple buying (stocks, bonds, physical metals etc.)Simple “physical” short-selling (borrowing assets to sell)
Collective investment forms (funds, ETFs etc.)Naked short (selling short without borrowing the asset). Mostly only short-term.
Derivatives, leveraged investments (buying with credits, options, CFD-s, futures, certificates, warrants, leveraged ETFs, etc.)Derivatives, leveraged investments (options, CFD-s, futures, warrants, etc.)
Collective investment forms (some “inverse ETFs”, “bear funds”)
Oh, No, Is GameStop Short Selling or Buying a Sin? – Ageless finance (2024)

FAQs

Is GameStop still shorted? ›

When the intense buying pressure for GME came in 2021, short sellers lost billions of dollars. As of May 9, short interest stood at only 24.1%-more than most other companies but not nearly as high as 2020 or 2021-so that same pressure isn't there.

How much money did short sellers lose on GameStop? ›

With the stock up some 185% in May, mark-to-market losses for short-sellers has ballooned to $1.4 billion, according to S3 Partners data. Skeptics betting against video-game retailer GameStop Corp. are facing a more than $1 billion loss after the company's share price roughly tripled this month.

Which hedge fund shorted GameStop? ›

Citron Research's fund took a 100% loss on GameStop during the 2021 short squeeze as meme stock mania reached a peak. Left said he started shorting GME stock this week after shares vaulted following a series of social media posts from Keith Gill, also known by his online username Roaring Kitty.

Is GameStop a good stock to buy? ›

The future of GameStop (GME) looks volatile but positive. Some analysts predict a significant decline in its stock price, with a consensus price target of $5.60, reflecting an 85.85% downside.

Who is shorting GameStop? ›

Citron Research's Andrew Left is shorting GameStop again after his 2021 short flopped.

Who lost the most money from GameStop? ›

Citron Capital: Suffered 100% losses on its GameStop positions during the stock's bullish rally.

Who loses money in short selling? ›

Put simply, a short sale involves the sale of a stock an investor does not own. When an investor engages in short selling, two things can happen. If the price of the stock drops, the short seller can buy the stock at the lower price and make a profit. If the price of the stock rises, the short seller will lose money.

How did people lose money on GameStop? ›

The normie GameStop investors who recognized the opportunity for a short squeeze were right — the stock was over-shorted, they saw their chance, and they seized it. The episode took out Melvin Capital — even after getting extra money injected, the hedge fund eventually went under.

How heavily shorted is GameStop? ›

GameStop and AMC are both heavily shorted stocks. Nearly a quarter of GameStop's 64.5 million shares on the market were recently held short, according to data from S3 Partners. The shorts added 3.3 million shares to positions this year, or 5% of total shares shorted, according to S3.

What hedge fund went out of business with GameStop? ›

New York-based hedge fund Melvin Capital was caught wrong-footed during the 2021 GameStop rally. The firm took heavy losses on its short position, eventually leading to its liquidation in May 2022.

Why are hedge funds losing money on GameStop? ›

As the company went stratospheric back in 2021, multiple platforms turned off the 'buy' button on the shares but retained the 'sell' button. Regardless of legitimate reasons, this caused losses to many traders — and led to accusations that the hedge funds had been deliberately let off the hook.

Is GameStop a buy sell or hold? ›

GameStop's analyst rating consensus is a Moderate Sell. This is based on the ratings of 1 Wall Streets Analysts.

Is GameStop stock predicted to go up? ›

Short & Long-Term GameStop Stock Price Predictions

2024: Stockscan's GameStop predictions for 2024 suggest a considerable decline from current levels, with average prices expected around $13.77, marking a sharp drop from recent prices.

Is GameStop stock expected to rise? ›

The forecaster set a baseline GameStop stock forecast for 2022 of $27.38 by the end of December 2022, up from $25.99 at the time of writing. It further predicted GME could reach $42.47 by the end of December 2023 and close 2025 at $72.54.

What happened with GameStop short selling? ›

GAMESTOP CORP. The extreme volatility has cost short sellers – those betting the shares will fall – big time. GameStop shares are up over 126% this week, costing the shorts more than $1.8 billion this month alone, according to Ortex, which compiles short interest data. Losses kick in at $39.70 per share.

Did GameStop short squeeze happen? ›

Short sellers get squeezed out of the market for the stock. The most notable short squeeze in decades was the GameStop short squeeze of January 2021. Notably, it seemed to originate on social media, especially the r/Wallstreetbets subgroup of Reddit.

Why was GameStop being shorted? ›

Left told Benzinga he started going short on GameStop (GME) this week again after shares in the company surged on excitement over a series of cryptic posts on the social media platform X, formerly Twitter, by investor Keith Gill, who is better known by his pseudonym Roaring Kitty.

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