This is on Reddit at ‘Wall Street Bets’. They saw the firm stacking lots of cash on shorting GameStop and so decided to beat them at their own game. More power to them I say and it’s a disgrace that a bailout is being spoken about for a company that got beat on the stock market by internet trolls. They were after all trying to profit from driving a real company out of business.
Funny there is always a bail out for the hawkish capitalists when they fuck up.
As usual, the cheif winners weren't little guys - sure, some may have made small double digits, but most of them are just johnny come lately pump and dump sheep.
It looks possibly like it wasn't some back street punters who hit on the idea: instead, they became aware of the activity being played out by the large players. And whilst I am not at all saying that in this case there was boiler room activity, this sort of thing is believed to occur in markets.
From today's telegraph -
Investors sit on huge gains from GameStop
Value of Activist investor Ryan Cohen's stake in GameStop worth about $2.2bn after a rollercoaster day for the shares
Fund managers are sitting on huge gains even after the Reddit-fuelled bubble in GameStop shares appeared to pop.
As the stock took a rollercoaster ride on Thursday,
dropping by nearly two thirds in one point, some managers had cashed out and others were still up by thousands of percentage points.
Ryan Cohen, the founder of Chewy.com and an activist
shareholder in GameStop, watched as the value of his holding slumped by roughly a third as trading stabilised.
His 13pc stake in GameStop bought for just $76m in December, had been worth about $3bn at the start of trading on Thursday but was down to about $2.25bn by mid-afternoon.
While retail investors have gleefully acquired shares in the struggling videogames retailer, sending its shares soaring, traditional fund managers have also ridden the wave to huge gains.
According to its latest US filings, one UK quant fund, Quadrature Capital, bought 130,000 GameStop shares last year when they were worth less than $10.
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Its shares would have been worth about $32m in afternoon trading on Thursday. The fund did not respond to a request for comment on whether it still held the position.
Tyndall Investment Management, a fund founded by former Jupiter fund manager Alex Odd, snapped up 80,000 shares in total in December and early January. It sold its final shares on January 26.
Felix Wintle, manager of its North American fund, said: “We believed the bear case was complacent. The stock was sold 144pc short, but you had an activist shareholder with a strong track record in Ryan Cohen and a whole new management team - proof the business still had validity. We hoped it might hit $100 in three years, but it did it in about three weeks.”
Meanwhile, David Harding’s Winton Group owned about 20,000 shares in GameStop, according to a quarterly filing. Winton declined to comment on its market positions.
GameStop’s biggest shareholders including Fidelity, BlackRock and Vanguard, all stand to make huge gains even after the massive pullback in trading on Thursday that saw GameStop shares plunge 65pc.
Other substantial holders include Norway’s central bank and Michael J Burry.
Meanwhile, other fund managers have secured trades granting them huge returns on shares and options held in companies pumped by retail investors on the Reddit forum WallStreetBets.
They include Silverlake, a major creditor of Odeon owner AMC, which owned a $600m convertible bond that would flip when its share price reached more than $13, according to the
Financial Times.
New York fund Mudrick Capital swapped $100m in debt for shares that are now worth $273m.
The incredible surge in GameStop’s share price was fuelled by an assault by amateur online traders determined to squeeze out shortellers in the stock. The buying frenzy was egged on by users of the internet forum WallStreetBets amid claims of market manipulation on both sides.
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From another Telegraph article today
Neil Wilson at markets.com said that the saga was "going to end in tears – these things always, always do".
"It just smells bad and looks like manipulation that relies on the greater fool theory for anyone to make money," he said.
"Not a good look and it’s being justified with high mindedness like ‘democratisation’ of markets. Pump and dump is all it looks like to me."
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and the FT today
The Reddit army of day traders has handed gains worth hundreds of millions of dollars to two big-name creditors of struggling cinema operator AMC Entertainment, after the investment firms swapped risky debt for equity that has skyrocketed in value. The stock price of AMC, the world’s largest cinema operator, soared 300 per cent to $19.90 on Wednesday, as individual investors drove up the price of the stock. That exceeded the trigger price on $600m of convertible bonds held by Silver Lake Group. The firm has now swapped the debt — which paid interest of 2.95 per cent — into AMC stock at a price of $13.51, according to regulatory filings.