首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
A Company’s Battle to Show It Was a Victim of Abusive Short-selling A) Short sellers bet against companies by borrowing thei
A Company’s Battle to Show It Was a Victim of Abusive Short-selling A) Short sellers bet against companies by borrowing thei
admin
2022-10-23
34
问题
A Company’s Battle to Show It Was a Victim of Abusive Short-selling
A) Short sellers bet against companies by borrowing their stock and selling it. The hope is that the share price will fall before the shares must be returned. That way, the shorter can buy new shares more cheaply to settle with the lender, and pocket the difference, less a small amount of interest. Those who make then-living this way do markets a big service, by seeking out and drawing attention to mispriced shares.
B) Not all shorting, however, is welcome—or legal. "Naked" short-selling involves selling a stock that you have not yet borrowed or otherwise lined up for delivery. This circumvents the natural limits on shares available for shorting and is deemed abusive if it is deliberately intended to send misleading signals to markets or, worse, to pile downward pressure on the share price—as opposed to, say, for hedging purposes or as part of market-making.
C) Naked shorting hit the headlines in the 2007 -2008 financial meltdown, when regulators tightened restrictions on the practice (and later, briefly, banned all shorting of bank stocks), fearful that it was being used to destabilise markets. Though the issue has long since receded from front pages, it has continued to percolate, including in a long-running legal battle in America which the plaintiff portrays as a David-versus-Goliath struggle.
D) Overstock, an online retailer, claims that in 2004 -2007 Wall Street firms cooked up a manipulative scheme in conjunction with smaller trading outfits based in New York and New Jersey. The aim was to increase the supply of Overstock shares that could be sold short, and to profit from peddling them to hedge-fund shorts. This alleged manipulation was carried out in part by using complex trading strategies that avoided settling past transactions, in effect creating "phantom" shares. That, Overstock asserts, explains why at one point the number of shorted Overstock shares was higher than the number of shares the firm had issued.
E) The intention, Overstock maintains, was to profit from first creating and then lending out the illusory shares, and in the process to push down the retailer’s share price. At the time the company was on the so-called "threshold list" (of stocks with a high incidence of settlement failures) for a staggering 667 consecutive trading days—an indicator both of very high demand and of possible manipulation.
F) Overstock argues that Wall Street firms were attracted to the high fees they could earn from lending out its and other hard-to-borrow shares—as much as 50% of the share price, on an annualised basis—and from clearing related trades. Securities lending is not sexy, but it is a big business: $1. 7 trillion-worth of stocks, bonds and other securities was on loan as of June 2015, according to DataLend.
G) By creating more stock for shorting, the alleged scheme would have put downward pressure on Overstock’s share price. That would have helped the brokers involved by making their trades cheaper to service. They could also have benefited if, as would have been likely, the downdraught increased demand for Overstock shares among hedge-fund short-sellers.
H) The small New York and New Jersey trading outfits were the ink-stained workmen in what Overstock alleges was the stock-lending equivalent of a back-room printing press for counterfeit banknotes. Some of these firms have since been fined by the Securities and Exchange Commission or other regulators for breaches of Reg SHO, a set of rules governing short-selling.
I) Overstock argues that the traders would have needed willing accomplices higher up the financial food chain. It initially sued a dozen Wall Street firms, later narrowing its focus to Goldman Sachs, the traders’ prime broker, and Merrill Lynch (now part of Bank of America), their clearing broker. Goldman settled with the retailer earlier this year, without admitting any wrongdoing. Merrill remains a target; the case is due to go to trial in March. Merrill, too, denies wrongdoing.
J) The case is complex, and many of the facts have been obscured by the sealing of key documents. Overstock fought for years to have these unsealed. Several media organisations (including The Economist) filed pleas in support of its call for transparency. After long deliberation, the court in California that is hearing the case recently made some of the documents public. They include Overstock’s fifth amended complaint in a racketeering suit that was ultimately unsuccessful.
K) The firm was barred from filing this because it missed a court deadline, but says the complaint presents "the most accurate statement of what we will argue at the trial" (the case now rests on alleged violations of state securities laws). The court also released dozens of e-mails and other documents, some of which form the basis of Overstock’s claims.
L) At the heart of the alleged scheme were deliberate efforts to "fail to deliver", meaning failing to produce for settlement shares supposedly borrowed for the purposes of short-selling. In one e-mail, a broker says that Scott Arenstein, one of the New Jersey-based traders, has large short positions in stocks "that everyone on the street is failing". In another, a Merrill clearing executive says "We are NOT borrowing negatives? Why would we want to borrow them? We want to fail on them. " ("Negatives" is a reference to "negative rebate" stocks; those which are scarce and more expensive to borrow.) The only rational explanation for the trades was that the brokers and traders involved understood and agreed that "no borrowing and delivery will occur... In other words the short sale will be a naked short sale", according to a court declaration by an expert hired by Overstock to review the trades, which forms part of the unsealed trove.
M) Merrill argues in a court filing that the litigation is "wasteful and expensive" and has produced no evidence that it was engaged in intentional market manipulation. The firm says that the trading and broking in question was in a legal grey area at the time, that it didn’t receive clear guidance from regulators on what was or wasn’t permitted under Reg SHO until 2007, and that this clarification closed a loophole which had been exploited by certain clients who "misrepresented" to Merrill the nature of their trading.
N) The SEC has increased its focus on naked shorting since the market quakes of 2008. But it has targeted mostly small firms, leading some to accuse it of skirting the issue. Some experts say it is difficult, if not impossible, for financial minnows to dodge the rules without help from bigger fish.
O) Moreover, although regulation has been tightened, and policing stepped up a bit, there are worries that trading strategies continue to evolve to allow canny operators to get around the latest rules. In 2013 the SEC issued a risk alert after observing the use of exotic trading techniques such as " buy-writes", "married puts" and "customisable flex options", sometimes in dizzying combinations, to evade settlement requirements—possibly to aid naked shorting. The Overstock case may relate to events a decade ago, but the issues it raises look anything but old.
Overstock changed its strategy of lawsuit by just suing two principal Wall Street brokers.
选项
答案
I
解析
由题干关键词strategy of lawsuit和Wail Street brokers定位到I段第二句。同义转述题。I段第二句提到,Overstock最初起诉了数十个华尔街公司,后来缩小了诉讼范围,仅仅起诉首要经纪公司和结算经纪公司这两个主要公司。题干中的changed its strategy of lawsuit对应原文中的later narrowing its focus,故选I。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/OLR7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、ResorttothePart-timeJobCenter.B、Turntotheirprofessorforhelp.C、Hireaprofessionalwithbetterpay.D、Payherfull
A、Itwillbeconsumedbymoreandmoreyoungpeople.B、Itwillbecomethefirstcourseatdinnerparties.C、Itwillhavetobec
A、Itwasmadebychance.B、Itwastheresultoflongsearches.C、Itwasfundedbyalocaluniversity.D、ItwasmadebyanArabia
A、Itishardtoseparatebigdatafromtraditionalanalytics.B、Bigdataismorepopularthantraditionalanalyticsnow.C、Peopl
A、Youwillimprovetherelationshipwitholdfriends.B、Youwillgetsomelatestandusefulinformation.C、Youwillgetsomeopp
A、TeensshouldusetheInternetasanimportanttooloftheirdailylife.B、Teensshouldtakeregularbreaksfromtheircomputer
A、Dogstrainedtohelpthedisabled.B、Effortsmadetoprotectwildanimals.C、Dogstrainedtofindendangeredanimals.D、Effort
A、Becausethebirthratehasrisen.B、Becausethereisastateofemergency.C、Becauserecentlybabiesarebornwithdefects.D、
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledOnUniversityAutonomousEnrollment.Youshouldwrite
A、Theyprovidedmessagesfromthegods.B、Theywouldhelpmilitaryleadersinbattle.C、Theywereadifferentworldwevisitedw
随机试题
40岁农民,诊断左肺炎球菌肺炎,治疗上该患者应用青霉素800万U,2次/d静点,3天后体温未明显下降。左胸痛加重考虑可能为哪种原因引起
肝郁发热型的内伤发热首选方剂是
下列哪种情形不属于自首?()
下列关于费用效益分析中贴现率参数对环境保护作用的说法,正确的有()。
在海关放行前遭受损失的货物可根据海关认定的受损程度减征关税。()
韩国某制片厂与我方合作拍摄题为《动物世界》的影片,因拍摄需要,本次进境除带了拍摄所需要的道具设备外、还带了2只剧情所需要的海豚(属于《进出口野生动植物种商品目录》商品),2006年6月8日,韩方制片厂人员一行入境,当日以凭保放行的形式向广州机场海关办理了申
“备案号”栏应填写:()。“提运单号”栏应填写:()。
为了取得良好的讲解效果,导游员往往用制造悬念的方法吸引游客的注意力,下列讲解方法可以取得制造悬念效果的是()
CIER指数用来反映就业市场景气程度,其计算方法是:CIER指数=市场招聘需求人数/市场求职申请人数。根据有关机构发布的数据,2018年第一季度CIER指数为1.91,第二季度为1.88,第三季度为1.97,第四季度为2.38。2018年第三季度,招聘需求
某宿舍住着四个留学生,分别来自美国、加拿大、韩国和日本。他们分别在中文、国际金融和法律三个系就读,其中:(1)日本留学生单独在国际金融系。(2)韩国留学生不在中文系。(3)美国留学生和另外某个留学生同在某个系。(4)
最新回复
(
0
)