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Redditors gave Wall Street traders an absolute pasting


You can close longs or shorts. If you so wish.

Don't get me wrong, it would obviously make sense to close positions on these stocks before now as they're massively high risk. But why should retail investors only be given one option (sell) when no laws are being affirmatively broken.

Gamestop up another 20% today 😵
 
Don't get me wrong, it would obviously make sense to close positions on these stocks before now as they're massively high risk. But why should retail investors only be given one option (sell) when no laws are being affirmatively broken.

Gamestop up another 20% today 😵
Same reason I can't sell them. To stop disorderly market conditions.
 
Don't get me wrong, it would obviously make sense to close positions on these stocks before now as they're massively high risk. But why should retail investors only be given one option (sell) when no laws are being affirmatively broken.

Gamestop up another 20% today 😵

because this was a crowdfunding effort to mess up the hedgefunds and not about making money... the many many redditors holding a few shares are quite happy to hold onto them past Friday, they are tweeting to that effect, their anger only fuelled by the ridiculous measures being taken against them
 
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No that's not a disorderly market.

:lol:

Not trying to be deliberately obstinate here, but doesn't this whole memestocks / shortselling fiasco suggest that the practice of shorting in the first place can easily prove a one way ticket to a disorderly market?

i.e.

If billion $ funds weren't shorting GameStop to 140% of its float yesterday, how could retail investors off Reddit cause what you call a disorderly market today.
 
:lol:

Not trying to be deliberately obstinate here, but doesn't this whole memestocks / shortselling fiasco suggest that the practice of shorting in the first place can easily prove a one way ticket to a disorderly market?

i.e.

If billion $ funds weren't shorting GameStop to 140% of its float yesterday, how could retail investors off Reddit cause what you call a disorderly market today.
A disorderly market is where there is excessive volatility. There's nothing wrong with shares going from 2 dollars to 400 dollars. As long as its orderly and buyers and sellers can participate.
 
It's like ManU fans all of a sudden complaining how unfair it is that other clubs are spending loads on players.
It's like that but that then the opposing teams are told their goal keepers have to lean up against the post until Man Utd get a 9 point lead in the table and the referees then refuse to book Man Utd at all.
 
A disorderly market is where there is excessive volatility. There's nothing wrong with shares going from 2 dollars to 400 dollars. As long as its orderly and buyers and sellers can participate.

We agree on these points in principle at least.

Personally it looks to me like an extremely volatile market... triggered by short selling.

No need to answer but I wonder if you would you have been quite as fervent in your support for retail investors if (hypothetically) the SP of another company had gone from 400 dollars to 2 dollars as a result of shorting? This Reddit shit is shock of the new and people at institutions (I'm assuming you work for one? sorry if not) are very wary and spooked by it.

Maybe memestocks are a new investment trend, a loophole looked at unfavourably ethically and extremely high risk/reward. Either way, both seem pretty fucked to me - and can't help but think they'll cause huge losses either side of the fence this time with stocks like AMC/GME etc.
 
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