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Thread: DOJ is reportedly exploring if they can charge stock market short-sellers...

  1. #1

    DOJ is reportedly exploring if they can charge stock market short-sellers...

    The Department of Justice is reportedly exploring if they can charge stock market short-sellers with the same law used to take down the mafia

    https://markets.businessinsider.com/...ing-2022-2?amp

    An ongoing investigation into the practices of several stock market short-sellers is heating up, and the Department of Justice is exploring if it can use a federal law that was originally enacted to prosecute the mafia, according to a Reuters report.

    The Justice Department already sent subpoenas to dozens of short-selling firms last year, including high-profile activists Andrew Left of Citron Research and Carson Block of Muddy Waters.

    While no final decision has been made by prosecutors, potential charges under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO, remain an option "on the table," Reuters reported, citing two sources familiar with the situation.

    This wouldn't be the first time RICO charges were leveled against Wall Street participants. In the 1980s, Michael Milken was charged with racketeering, though he reached a plea deal that did not include those charges. And in 2019, JPMorgan executives were charged with racketeering related to the price manipulation of precious metals.

    The current investigation into short-sellers revolves around their trading practices, specifically whether manipulative tactics were employed around the same time a negative report was published.

    According to prior reports, the DOJ seized hardware, trading records, and private messages from various short-sellers and is focused on the act of "spoofing" and "scalping," two practices that could lead to big gains for traders.

    Spoofing is an illegal practice banned in 2010 in which a trader floods the market with fake orders to influence a stock price. Scalping is related to activist short-sellers selling out of their position for profits without disclosing it.

    Short-sellers are an unloved group of market participants that get a lot of blowback from the companies they target and the investors of those companies. Some see their tactics as predatory, as they often have the power to move a stock that they might have a position in by releasing a critical report. Critics say these reports use misleading information that doesn't give a complete picture of the situation at hand.

    But some short-sellers also have a proven track record of identifying and exposing fraudulent companies that sometimes go bankrupt. Such companies that were the target of short-seller research included Enron, Sino-Forest, and Wirecard AG, among others.

    One person who is happy with the Justice Department's investigation is Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

    "I am greatly encouraged by the Justice Department investigating short sellers. This is something the SEC should have done, but, curiously, did not," Musk said in an e-mail to CNBC. "They will short a company, conduct a negative publicity campaign to drive the stock price down temporarily and cash out, then do it all over again many times."

    Musk's position against short-sellers is not surprising given that Tesla stock was a popular target among short-sellers for many years until it broke out to record highs in late 2019 as the EV maker turned a profit. While 25% of Tesla's shares were sold short in 2019, that figure now stands at just 2%, according to data from Koyfin.

    So far, the investigation by the Justice Department has reached nearly 30 investment and research firms that engage in short-selling. No one has been accused of wrongdoing, and the investigation may not lead to charges being brought.

  2. #2
    Short sellers provide a legitimate market activity of benefit to society. They call out companies on their bullshit. This helps push bad companies to failure where capital can be repurposed by better managers at other companies.

    I suspect 99.999% of short selling is legitimate, non-scamming, similar to 99.999% of AR15 owners don’t shoot up schools. And I suspect the reason for going after short sellers is the same as the reason to go after AR15 owners. They want to ban all short selling.

    Then, stonks only go up!

  3. #3
    Modding this sack of shit BehindBlueI's's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sanch View Post
    I suspect 99.999% of short selling is legitimate
    You have a hell of a lot more faith in the morality and ethics of the movers/shakers of the financial world than I do.
    Sorta around sometimes for some of your shitty mod needs.

  4. #4
    You have a lot more faith in the morality and ethics of the government than I do.
    David S.

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