numbercruncher
Beware of Dropbears
- Joined
- 12 October 2006
- Posts
- 3,136
- Reactions
- 1
You cant blame the shorters as i said 3 months ago this mob will be next cab off the rank,as for t/o?whats to takeover...100% firesale must happen,you were clever only losing 25%,just amazes me why anyone would buy this junk.
the business model of rolling assets up that you dont own,borrow massively,take commissions,fees doesnt work never will...its abc again,or as yogi bera says"its de ja vu all over again!"...tb
downgrade already sitting in the anns.inbox before open
next cab off the rank...asciano
Can someone explain to me...
Why would someone lend shares to another for them to sell into the market, batter the price down and then return them back at far lower price???
Who ever lends shares to a short sell will be getting screwed???
Anyone really understand the mechanics of short selling??
benwex
Can someone explain to me...
Why would someone lend shares to another for them to sell into the market, batter the price down and then return them back at far lower price???
Who ever lends shares to a short sell will be getting screwed???
Anyone really understand the mechanics of short selling??
benwex
I am thinking along the same lines. It escapes me. The quantities of shares being borrowed is huge therefore they must belong to some institutions , such as super fund managers. Why would any fund manager lend the shares to drive the entity down to a point of business destruction, like in the case of Centro or ABC Learning? The fund may receive back the lending fee but if the value of the shares returned have no hope of recovering then the fund would be at big loss. If our superfund managers are wiping out the value of our super investments - then the thought is pretty scary and APRA better get a move on on regulating this activity!
Does any one have any explanation to what has been happening? Am i missing the point somewhere?
It's interesting to note that MQG is down nearly 4% as a side-effect of BNB's hammering.....but yeah 4.70 appears to be the lowest point for BNB today. They are now hovering at 5.34.
I tend to be of the thinking that if there are so many institutions who will not allow BNB to go down the gurgler then Macquarie should also be fine in the long run.
Maybe better to have a separate thread on this. APRA is not the regulator. The ASX sets the rules and ASIC is the regulator.I am thinking along the same lines. It escapes me. The quantities of shares being borrowed is huge therefore they must belong to some institutions , such as super fund managers. Why would any fund manager lend the shares to drive the entity down to a point of business destruction, like in the case of Centro or ABC Learning? The fund may receive back the lending fee but if the value of the shares returned have no hope of recovering then the fund would be at big loss. If our superfund managers are wiping out the value of our super investments - then the thought is pretty scary and APRA better get a move on on regulating this activity!
Does any one have any explanation to what has been happening? Am i missing the point somewhere?
Can someone explain to me...
Why would someone lend shares to another for them to sell into the market, batter the price down and then return them back at far lower price???
Who ever lends shares to a short sell will be getting screwed???
Anyone really understand the mechanics of short selling??
benwex
Anybody who goes short, has to buy back, so what is the difference?
Only people being scared out are the weak hands and 'mum and dad' investors.
Once some of these "big bad Hedge Funds" start covering their shorts, there could well be a squeeze which will then get all those weak hands back in at higher prices.
The share price will then slowly drift down.
Who wins?
Think about it.
Anybody who goes short, has to buy back, so what is the difference?
Only people being scared out are the weak hands and 'mum and dad' investors.
Once some of these "big bad Hedge Funds" start covering their shorts, there could well be a squeeze which will then get all those weak hands back in at higher prices.
The share price will then slowly drift down.
Who wins?
Think about it.
Citigroup downgraded its risk rating on Babock to speculative from high. A hairy-chested punt in other words. The comments on credibility were telling.
"We have moved from an ongoing business valuation of $25 to a price target of $6.80 based on 0.9x NTA until this issue is clarified. Our rating is now 'neutral'.
I figured that was a rhetorical question.Who wins?
Think about it.
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