Return of short-selling bans: market protection or 'war
against truth'?
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[November 19, 2019] By
Lawrence Delevingne, Simon Jessop and Jonathan Spicer
NEW YORK/LONDON/ISTANBUL (Reuters) - New
moves to curb short-selling in some countries have set the stage for a
renewed battle between free market advocates and authorities aiming to
check investors they see as profiteers who destabilize major companies.
Turkey's regulator banned short-selling of seven domestic banks last
month after U.S. prosecutors charged state lender Halkbank <HALKB.IS>
with Iranian sanctions violations.
South Korea is considering restrictions while European authorities are
investigating short-sellers over alleged market manipulation - part of a
nascent trend that Carson Block, founder of U.S. short-seller Muddy
Waters Capital LLC, decried to Reuters as a "global war against truth."
Meanwhile, as Brexit looms, authorities in Frankfurt, Rome and Amsterdam
could temporarily curb short-selling of companies to counter price
swings triggered by the European divorce, officials have told Reuters.
The effectiveness of such bans has been questioned by some academics and
institutions including the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. But the
global mood may be increasingly turning against short-sellers, who
borrow shares and immediately sell them, betting the price will fall
before they buy back the shares and return them, pocketing the
difference.
Brexit and the U.S.-China trade war are among political and
macroeconomic forces that have buffeted markets, posing new conundrums
for regulators. South Korean officials, for example, cited the trade
conflict as a reason for their possible shorting curbs.
Such prohibitions have declined significantly since 2008-2012, when
authorities moved to buttress tumbling markets during the global
financial and European debt crises.
The former saw about 20 countries ban shorts of a total of more than
7,000 stocks, while the latter triggered bans of around 1,700, according
to a 2018 study from the European Systemic Risk Board, which oversees
the EU financial system.
"While short-selling can be a valid trading strategy, when used in
combination with spreading false market rumors this is clearly abusive,"
the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) said in 2011 as
short-selling bans swept Europe.
The EU agency said countries instituted the bans to restrict the
benefits of spreading false rumors or to achieve a regulatory level
playing field.
Critics of bans, however, say they undermine free markets, as well as
limiting accurate asset-pricing and dampening trading volumes, raising
transaction costs for all investors.
Richard Payne, a professor at London's Cass Business School, said that
research suggested "the real effect of these bans is simply to increase
trading costs and reduce trading activity."
'LITTLE IMPACT ON PRICES'
A New York Fed review
https://www.newyorkfed.org/
medialibrary/
media/research/current_issues/ci18-5.pdf of more than 400 U.S. financial
stocks over the 14 days that short-sale bans were in effect in late
2008, for example, showed they did not have the intended effect.
Those shares had a average price decline of 12% during that period,
largely in line with non-financial stocks not subject to restrictions.
Meanwhile, trading costs for those stocks are estimated to have risen
more than $600 million against averages, according to the 2012 report.
"Our analysis...suggests that the bans had little impact on stock
prices," it said, acknowledging that the specific causes of the price
movements were unclear. "At the same time, the bans lowered market
liquidity and increased trading costs."
A 2017 analysis of short bans by ESMA also found there was no
statistically significant impact on share prices or liquidity.
[to top of second column] |
Carson Block, Chief Investment Officer, Muddy Waters Capital LLC.,
speaks at the Sohn Investment Conference in New York City, U.S. May
4, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
The EU agency, however, remains committed to select interventions. This year, it
backed Germany's two-month short sale ban on payment firm Wirecard <WDIG.DE>
following a disputed media report of financial irregularities as "appropriate
and proportionate to address the threat to German financial markets."
Fabio De Masi, a left-leaning German lawmaker, told Reuters that short-selling
bans could be legitimate policy tools for dealing with traders who unjustly
sought profits and could trigger market panic, even if their efficacy could
vary.
He generally questioned the value of short-sellers and said that hedge funds
should be regulated. "Not every financial player or innovation is beneficial to
our economy," he added.
The Turkish ban initially pushed up bank stocks <.XBANK>, helped by a broader
market gain. While trading volumes dropped to lows for the year in the following
days, they have since started to creep back closer to pre-ban levels.
Financial regulators in Germany and France declined to comment for this story.
Borsa Istanbul, the Turkish stock exchange and a financial supervisor, did not
respond to a request for comment.
SHORT-SELLER DECRIES 'FAKE NEWS'
Short sale bans are not recent market phenomena; they have roots in the early
1600s, when authorities intervened to support shares of the Dutch East India
Company.
Some critics, like Block of Muddy Waters, see bans and other actions against
shorts as part of a broader political narrative.
"The restrictions are a way of codifying the 'fake news' moniker that really
means 'truthful but uncomfortable news'," Block said.
He added that after Germany and France opened investigations into short-sellers
for their bets against companies there, he hesitated to speak publicly about his
short positions in both countries.
State prosecutors in Germany, France and Italy have investigated short-sellers
related to their research and bets against Wirecard, French retailer Casino <CASP.PA>
and Italian bio-plastics maker Bio-on <ON.MI>, respectively.
Dan David, another U.S. short seller, known for betting against Chinese
companies, said he feared similar actions by global regulators if a recession
hits.
"This kind of intervention never works in the long term but never fails
politically in the short term," he added.
Khaled Abdel Majeed, founder of London-based hedge fund firm Mena Capital, said
the Turkish ban was a sign of economic weakness and that he was inclined to stay
out of the country.
"Any country that tries to influence the market by issuing new laws, that's not
a good sign," he said.
Kerr Neilson, founder of $17 billion global equity investor Platinum Asset
Management in Sydney, said that departures from global free-trade norms were
accelerating, which could include more government action against short-sellers.
"We're living in a world of interventions," he said.
(Reporting by Lawrence Delevingne in New York, Simon Jessop in London, and
Jonathan Spicer in Istanbul. Additional reporting by Maya Nikolaeva in Paris.
Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Pravin Char.)
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