It is a very risky stock, the reason all this started was that for some reason a few hedge funds had been shorting the hell out of it. It's still currently at 120% short volume. The rising value of stock caused a big loss for Melvin Capital. — fdrake
I think it remains the case that brokerages stopped people from being able to buy GME even with all their own money up front. But they allowed people simultaneously to sell it. Robinhood and Etoro definitely did that - a couple of friends tried to buy the stocks with their own money and couldn't. But it was fine to sell the stock! — fdrake
So quite frankly, I think the outrage is totally misplaced. — Benkei
↪Michael Short positions of certain sizes have to be reported to the competent authorities in EU. Don't know about the US: https://www.afm.nl/en/professionals/registers/meldingenregisters/netto-shortposities-actueel — Benkei
Nothing greater than 100%, not even GME anymore. — Michael
Ummm... Whoops! — Kenosha Kid
This is how the elites govern now - by means of 'structural power', where they close ranks and deny access to means rather than end-product. One precedent for this which I've studied alot is in the case of sovereign debt, where solidarity among lending institutions (banks and so forth) simply refuse to lend more to indebted countries in order to enforce austerity and political change (this is basically the story of international finance relations since the 70s, and no one talks about it). This kinda of neoliberal strategy is favoured because it sticks with the script of "open-markets": the state isn't denying anything, it's allowing certain institutions to do stuff (even if that stuff happens to be denying access). It's devolution of power 'outside' the state and 'freedom' to corporate action. — StreetlightX
From what I was reading earlier to make sure my understanding of margins was correct, that’s normal practice when someone buys something on margin and then it tanks below the required maintenance margin percentage (e.g. if you buy $2k of something with only $1k of cash, i.e. at 50% margin, and then it tanks to only $1.5k in value, if your maintenance margin is 33% then your holdings of that will be liquidated to cut the losses of the money you borrowed from the brokerage to purchase it). — Pfhorrest
If there's something shitty about shorting a struggling brick and mortar retailer during a pandemic, then there's something much shittier about removing the people's ability to support that retailer/buy that stock in order to help out your boys over at Melvin. — BitconnectCarlos
This doesn't help Gamestop in any way. They've already issued those shares and received the notional value. Any premium being paid goes to the seller. — Benkei
I suppose some banks might be persuaded by the market expectations of the companies performance to give loans to the extent market capitalisation is a measure of that — Benkei
Right, that's what I'm talking about. I once worked for a penny-stock company and their whole business strategy seemed to be to look promising enough to boost their stock price enough to convince investors that they're worth lending money to actually do that promising stuff with. — Pfhorrest
market cap only reflects the expected performance of investors. That in itself doesn't affect Gamestop's performance.
Look at it this way, when a company issues a stock for the first time it's like it gets a perpetual loan from the investor and in return will pay a variable interest (dividends) which is related to company's performance. This loan can be transferred from investor to investor and prices for the loan will vary depending on expected dividends and therefore expected performance. One investor pays another for the right to the dividends but the original amount loaned to the company doesn't change.
Shorting a stock is again just transactions between investors, first you borrow one from an investor and sell it to another investor, then later you buy one from yet another investor to return the borrowed stock to the first investor. These are all transactions between investors with no effect to the company but says something about investors' expectations of the performance of the company. — Benkei
Why is it a perpetual loan rather than a one-time loan when the stock is issued for the first time and sold to the public? — BitconnectCarlos
While I understand that a company's market cap may not reflect its fundamentals or its actual performance, I find it hard to swallow that market cap just apparently doesn't matter to the company as you seem to be implying. — BitconnectCarlos
On gDrive because CNBC keeps taking down the full video elsewhere. — StreetlightX
Well, if the market cap of the company is collateral for any debt, it might be an issue. (I think mentioned this already)The market price of a stock in no way changes the capital of a company and therefore has no effect on its solvency. — Benkei
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.