GME - Short-Squeeze möglich
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Bin neben Gamestop in AMC und Naked Brand Group drin. "Kick ass" für die Shorts :-))
Hab' gestern einen Twitter Beitrag von Elon Musk gesehen, in dem er meinte, dass man kein Haus verleihen kann, das man nicht hat. Dass man kein Auto verleihen kann, das man nicht hat und warum geht das dann bei Aktien.
https://www.engadget.com/...xoXe9RpF6g6qQYpYZLuasjBYUWSXEiprzhfFitbrO
http://isthesqueezesquoze.com/
hat ein update bekommen. Wirklich sehr interessant was da geschrieben wird
Robinhood erhält einen massiven Shitstorm, weil sie die Leute wegen GameStar-Käufen kastrieren wollten.
Wenn erst Mal einige hedge Fonds pleite sind ....
Dann wird ne abartige Finanzkrise ausgelöst...
as of January 29,
the squeeze has not been squoze.
GME shorts have not begun to close their positions in substantial numbers.
the situation (1/28 5 PM ET):
short interest: 100% of float by Ortex, 123.25% of float by S3 Shortsight
change in short share availability: +9,000
robinhood and other brokerages relying on Citadel stopped accepting buy orders on stocks which Citadel wants to allow its hedge funds to unwind from. Robinhood is apparently going so far as to liquidate GME shares in accounts that are not using margin trading(!) If you're still on robinhood, you should find a new broker ASAP. Retail brokers who didn't stab their clients in the back include:
vanguard
td ameritrade
fidelity
wat
OK, listen up, you late-to-the-party, crayon-eating homunculus, here's what's going on:
Over the past year, hedge fund supervillains have made money by selling shares of Gamestop they don't actually own - they've just borrowed them. Short selling. If they sell enough they can drive the price down so far that when they eventually need to return the shares they borrowed, they can get them cheap. It's free money. They throw a couple hundred mil at this, chill in their offices watching live video feeds of homeless people being exsanguinated on the hoods of their vintage sports cars, write up an investor report, and call it a fiscal year.
They borrowed and sold a record amount - they sold more shares, in fact, than are actually traded, far more than Gamestop's float. This shouldn't have been allowed to happen and probably means they were selling shares they never even bothered to borrow - naked shorts. (Where were you on that one, SEC?) Essentially, they were simultaneously betting on Gamestop going bankrupt and doing their best to drive them into bankruptcy. It's a good tactic when you need to find a way to pay for your old wife's alimony and your new wife's poolboy.
But it presents an opportunity for the savvy degenerate gambler. Because these shares eventually need to be returned - after all, it does cost these funds money to borrow a share. And the higher the price goes, the more unstable it becomes, the more it costs to borrow. This means that at some point, they need to buy back those borrowed shares they sold.
All 140% of them.
So our visionary gambler, if they were to invest in Gamestop, would have a guaranteed buyer for their shares. And if millions of fellow degenerates were to ask their mother for an advance on their allowance so that they could buy Gamestop, too -
And then, if a famous e-commerce CEO were to buy a ton of Gamestop shares, join the board, and announce they're going to be a big company again by doing internet things and esports and radical new stuff -
And then, if a truly insane amount of call option buying - don't worry about it if you don't know - were to force market makers to rapidly buy up a ton of shares to fulfill all those options they sold in a wild phenomenon called a gamma squeeze that's basically the stock equivalent of an atmospheric microburst, suddenly spiking Gamestop's price to unheard-of levels -
- hang on, I need a new pair of pants -
Well then you'd have the perfect conditions for a short squeeze. The price is insanely high. There's a whole street of funds with deep pockets who absolutely must find a way to buy all those insanely expensive shares. And by buying them - 140% of the amount traded! - they're going to drive up the price even more. So one day, a fund will run out of money paying interest on their borrowed shares, and they'll have to drive GME's price through the roof buying enough shares to give them back. And as the price climbs, other short holders are going to be required to cover their borrowed shares by buying them. It's a runaway reaction where the more it happens, the more it happens. You know, one of those cute little phenomena like virus spread. Or nuclear bombs.
So who are they buying from? That's right. At what price are they buying? Well, that depends.
Hedge fund managers holding GME shorts would really, really like to convince GME stock holders to sell them some shares right now, before it climbs any higher, so that they can return the shares they borrowed and get out before they get steamrolled into bankrupcy. And they've got lots of tools at their disposal to do this: they can pump up other stocks to create FOMO, causing GME holders to sell their shares to go chase some shiny new meme. They can hire PR companies to astroturf these stocks on Elon Musk fan clubs and gambling forums. They can buy up shares and then, after trading hours are over, sell them in progressively cheaper tranches to drive down the stock price. They can wipe the hobo blood off their wattle and go cry on television about how they're being bullied. They can call up their investors, like Citadel, the company who processes all your orders, and tell them to stop letting people buy Gamestop while they try to drive the price down. They have, in fact, tried all of these things. But it hasn't worked - GME's price is higher than ever. It's out of control, now - there are too many people involved. There are other institutions involved, trying to extract maximum profit out of the shorts. The meme has reached critical mass.
Now it's a classic million-player prisoner's dilemma: every GME holder has visions of selling their shares for unlimited chicken tendies and cocaine dipping sauce. Maybe they think they alone can sell, while everyone else can continue to drive the price up by holding. But if every degenerate gambler thought this way, and sold their shares, very quickly the short squeeze wouldn't happen. Short holders would buy up all the shares being sold at a painful but manageable loss, they would cover their position, and the nuke would never be detonated.
What's a prisoner in this dilemma to do? At last, the point arrives. To avoid selling too early, the savvy degenerate gambler would wait until short interest - the amount of shares shorted out there - started to decline substantially. As long as nobody was defecting, nobody selling early, that decline in shares shorted would come with a spike in the price of the stock, as the few shares available are bought at astronomical prices. And this decline in shares shorted would distinguish this spike from gamma squeezes or regular old stock run-ups.
Then and only then, as the nuke goes off, the stock price ascends past Alpha Centauri, and the short interest finally starts declining, the short squeeze has begun. And then it's every gambler for themself.
resources:
do your own research you apes, don't rely on me
s3 shortsight (subscription)
ortex short interest (trial + subscription)
fintel short shares availability
iBorrow short shares borrow rates
Interactive Brokers borrow availability (free trial)
points of interest:
if you don't know this you shouldn't be gambling, but
robinhood didn't halt trading just because they hate you, they did it because Citadel made them. Robinhood can't actually place your order themselves, they need to go to a market maker to find a counterparty for you. Citadel actually pays robinhood for this, because your trades are free money for them - they overcharge you on the spread, and they place their own trades immediately before yours to take advantage of price movement. They're the ones who want you to lose money: they bailed out the biggest hedge fund shorting Gamestop, Melvin, so now they own a huge chunk of that fund. So now that they want the shorts to win, and the retail traders (you) to lose, they told robinhood to get lost, they just wouldn't be accepting buy orders on these stocks. Just sells. (This has never happened before.) Only then did Robinhood turn around and stab its retail traders in the back - because, of course, you're not their customer. Citadel is their customer. You're their product.
ok, this one's new to me: robinhood is apparently selling shares belonging to accounts that are not trading on margin. Margin calls are normal. Selling shares that your clients own outright is crazytown what-in-the-world shenanigans.
your broker is lending your shares out to people who want them, like the hedge funds you're betting against. depending who your broker is you can call them and tell them to stop, turn off margin trading, set limit sells at stratospherically high prices, or go get a real broker.
your broker is selling your information, like your sell price, to anybody who can pay for it. if you set a stop-loss sell at 100, and some other gambler set a stop-loss sell at 115, then a hedge fund wanting to drive the price down can start to chain-trigger stop-loss sells until the prices reaches a level low enough to allow them to escape the short squeeze.
by jp
@inflammateomnia
I am not a financial advisor and none of this is financial advice
do your own research and come to your own conclusions
Bei AMBAC ist der ganze Freefloat geshortet (20% aller Aktien).
Es sollte der ganze Freefloat oder mehr geshortet sein, damit sie leiden.
Alle großen Bewegungen sind abgesprochen und Insiderhandel dazu . Der Unterschied : die sog. großen machen das alles verdeckt und da sagt keiner was .
Aber so langsam wacht das VOLK auf bzgl. Börse , Politik etc. Schaut euch das Gemauschel an bei Putin , Lukaschenko etc . Aber das Volk wird langsam wach und merkt was bei den Eliten abgeht ( Korruption , Insiderhandel , Schmiergeld , etc )
Montag auf 1000 oder mehr...
Und das nur aus rein mathematischen Gründen + Herdentrieb und völlig ratlose short seller.
Ich bin nur mit ner kleinen Position drin aber es ist sooo unfassbar amüsant.
Die Quelle habe ich auf GameStop für euch eingestelllt.
https://www.ortex.com/symbol/nyse/gme/short_interest
Viel Glück
Wenn der Geld braucht geht dieser Kurs vermutlich ein wenig runter..
Nur so als Denkanstoß