SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : TSIS: WHAT IS GOING ON? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JRR4 who wrote (2507)6/3/1998 3:54:00 PM
From: gary g  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6931
 
I found this interesting reading as you may.......people
in stock loan departments on Wall Street, the back-office folks who must locate
shares to cover short positions. If they are frank, they will tell tales of tricks used by
professional investors, marketmakers and even company managements to juice a
stock and massacre short-sellers. When an investor shorts a stock, he must borrow
the shares from his broker. In large, widely traded stocks, this is usually a cinch. But
in stocks with relatively thin floats, it can be a problem. Why? Because according to
stock loan sources, mutual funds--with their massive stockholdings--are not big lenders
of equities today. Bank trust departments lend securities, mutual funds generally do
not. There could be several reasons for this. One, it's just not that lucrative. A fund
might earn 12.5 basis points--$1.25 million on a billion-dollar stock position--lending
AT&T stock to a U.S. borrower. Hardly worth the trouble. Then, too, short-selling is
considered un-American in some circles. But there's a more devious explanation for
this reluctance to lend stock for long periods to short-sellers: rich pickings to be made
by squeezing shorts.CALL IN THEIR BORROWED STOCK, and you force them to
go into the open market to cover--at whatever price the market demands. A lender of
a stock holds all the cards. At any time after he has lent the stock, he can call it back
in; the borrower has three days to return it. Marketmakers who carry positions
overnight in the stocks they "make" have been known to pull back their stock and
force buy-ins. The occasional mutual fund that lends shares temporarily does this as
well. The short-seller isn't the only victim here. Squeezing the short drives up prices,
creating volume and upward action that can attract momentum players. But once the
squeeze is over, there's nothing to hold up the price. Moreover, eliminating
short-sellers makes it easier to drive up the price of an already overvalued stock.
CORPORATE EXECUTIVES OF HEAVILY SHORTED STOCKS ALSO PLAY
THIS GAME. (E_MAIL THIS PART TO GEVAS IF SOMEONE HAS HIS
ADDRESS) First they put their considerable insider holdings into their margin
accounts, making them available for lending by the firm's stock loan department.
Shortly after these executives make their stock available for lending, it often happens
that they remove their holdings from the brokerage firm. Both actions force buy-ins.
Result: more volatility, volatility that has absolutely nothing to do with fundamentals.
Although no one maintains records of how many buy-ins take place on a given day,
traders say they are happening much more frequently today, especially in the past
year or so. One professional who has been buying and shorting stocks for 25 years
had experienced one buy-in during the previous 24 years of doing business. In the past
year, he's been on the receiving end of three. A small army of "freelance" stock
promoters ...promise to produce a big increase in volume ... by getting some friends to
post bullish "information" about the stock on the Internet. From where they sit,
marketmakers can often see where a buy-in is taking place and rush in buy orders
ahead of the squeezed short, further squeezing him. Shooting fish in a barrel.