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- 1 May 2007
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Big hedge fund decides company xyz is over geared with debt to current asset values;
Well then company xyz is overgeared in the first place. Good short.
The fund would obviously do a fair bit of research into company xyz, and they know that if they put too much capital into the short operation, they could get busted easily. A big squeeze by players who know of their short could really screw them over.
The first short drives the stock down causing the margin loan holders to cover their shortfal or sell into the falling share price driving the market down further;
They decide to push it further and attack again;
More margin calls, with the margin lenders having to sell into the falling market beacause their clients have run out of capital to prop up their portfolio's or the client calls time to sell as the share has fallen so far and could fall further;
Margin calls will only flush out so much. I doubt that a significant portion of the company's market cap is held by players who bought them on margin.
And guess what, it was an arm of the bank that lent the shares out in the first place to the hedge funds so that the hedge fund could short the market. Cunning beggars, they get their fees no matter what.
Probably not, conflict of interest. Chinese walls would be an insufficient excuse when push comes to shove.