Bonsoir, je viens de lire un message sur le forum de google finance concernant CDE. Il évoque un moyen de se protéger contre les vendeurs à découvert en mettant un ordre de vente à 50% voire 100% plus cher que le prix de l'action avec une échéance lointaine afin que nos actions ne soient pas utilisées par ceux qui short l'action (car elles sont, selon l'auteur, utilisées par ceux qui spéculent à la baisse) :
Beat The Shorts
The following are excerpts from the DRYS discussion group on a possible way to beat or impede shorts. If you think the idea has merit, cut and paste wherever, it could be helpful.
Longs, if you put a ridiculously high sell order on your shares; it prevents shorts from being able to borrow and short your shares. You're borrowing MONEY with margin... you aren't borrowing SHARES as you are with shorting. One is using money that's not yours (and that's just called business) while the other is using property that isn't yours. Shares can be borrowed from cash accounts on margin! That what a naked short is; borrowing shares multiple times against available shares. If you shares are just sitting without an order they are available. Sucks but it's true; your long position can be used against you by shorts; you could have 10,000 shares shorted against you, borrowed using your own 1000 shares. You have nothing to lose by setting a high sell order just in case; if I am wrong you have lost nothing. If I am right you will could screw some slime ball short! Some platforms won't let you place an order for much higher than the current price. The others will, but then warns I'm going to be charged more because it is a "non-electronic trade" (I guess it means that a trader has to manually look at it). But then again, I don't get charged unless it goes through anyway so who cares. Every account has different limits on how high you can place an order. It may only be 50% or 100% above the current price. If that is the case you just have to check back more often and raise the sell order price every couple of days. If enough people do it this institutions will have to call in the short positions due so that the borrowed shares can be sold. Anyone in a short position knows that this can happen at any time without notice, even if they are green on their trade; it’s a term you agree to when you take a short position. It will take a lot of people tying up their stocks, the more the better. The worst that can happen is that someone buys you out at 3X the stocks current rate. No charge unless a transaction is completed.
Qu'en pensez-vous ?
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