How a Columbia professor became the scourge of activist short sellers
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[March 18, 2022]
By Chris Prentice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - You may not have
heard of Joshua Mitts, a young Columbia University professor who is
making some powerful enemies on Wall Street.
The 36-year-old securities law specialist has become an increasingly
influential figure in the hot debate over activist short selling since
publishing a 2018 analysis of trading data that suggested some players
were manipulating the market.
Interviews with 12 people familiar with his work and career, including
Mitts himself and some of his toughest critics, shed light on how an
academic little known outside his field just a few years ago has since
taken center stage in the ugly feud between short sellers and the
companies they target.
That struggle has sparked a sprawling probe by the U.S. Department of
Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) into suspected
trading manipulation by short sellers and hedge funds.
Activist short sellers like Muddy Waters' Carson Block bet against
public companies they deem over-valued and then publish their investment
thesis. They say their work aids market efficiency and dispute Mitts'
analysis as flawed.
Nonetheless the interviews, which detail Mitts' contacts with U.S.
authorities, show the professor and his work have played a significant
role in the federal probes.
"One reason the work really resonated was it took a large sample and
showed there was evidence for what companies were saying: that there was
potential abuse," said Peter Molk, a law professor at the University of
Florida.
Mitts declined to comment on his work for the Justice Department beyond
pointing to a statement on his resume that he has "extensive experience
supporting" the agency. He defended his research and said he wanted to
be objective and is not opposed to short selling.
"Not only is short selling not illegal, it's important to have bears,"
he said.
Spokespeople for the Justice Department and the SEC, the main stock
market regulator, declined to comment.
Mitts' journey began in August 2018 when he reached out to real-estate
company Farmland Partners Inc, which was grappling with a steep fall in
its shares after an anonymous online post raised questions about its
solvency.
Weeks earlier, he had published his analysis of 1,720 pseudonymous posts
attacking publicly listed stocks on financial website Seeking Alpha
between 2010 and 2017. His study found such posts were preceded by
unusual and suspicious trading through stock options, in a process he
called "short and distort".
Prior to 2018, the battle between U.S. companies and their detractors
focused largely on the merits of short sellers and the veracity of their
claims. Mitts' work gave companies new ammunition: they could use data
to point to potentially manipulative trading tricks and allege fraud.
'ON A SILVER PLATTER'
Mitts spoke with Farmland executives about his work and Farmland then
retained him as an expert in late August 2018, the company said. Mitts'
analysis showed investors bought put options https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-stocks-shorts-insight-idINKCN1R20AW
with a short expiration window ahead of a Seeking Alpha posting. They
became profitable once Farmland's shares began to tumble, and
subsequently ginned up additional selling interest.
Put options are derivative contracts that give holders the right to sell
the underlying stock at a set price.
Short-selling graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2HyuFCE
In early September, Farmland CEO Paul Pittman and the company's
attorneys took the professor to meet with officials at the SEC's Denver
office, where they rebutted the short seller's claims and laid out the
short and distort arguments.
Pittman and the attorneys subsequently met officials at the Justice
Department in October, without Mitts, and again laid out their rebuttal
and manipulation theories, Farmland said.
"This is not about shorting. This is about securities fraud," CEO
Pittman told Reuters.
Elisabeth de Fontenay, a law professor at Duke University, said
scrutinizing such types of trading patterns would have been a no-brainer
for U.S. prosecutors.
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Undated handout photo of Joshua Mitts, Associate Professor of Law
and Milton Handler Fellow at Columbia Law School. Joshua
Mitts/Handout via REUTERS
"Josh Mitts handed them some
potential indicators of fraud on a silver platter. Once they get
handed that, they are going to look into it," she said.
Mitts had more corporate callers.
After Farmland, several other companies trying to
repel short sellers hired him to consult, including Banc of
California Inc, Burford Capital Ltd and Neovasc Inc, according to
court and regulatory filings.
Banc of California and Neovasc did not respond to requests for
comment. Burford Capital did not provide a comment for this story.
In 2019, Mitts began working as a consultant for the Justice
Department, according to one source familiar with the matter who
declined to be named because such work is sensitive.
SHORT SELLERS HIT BACK
Reuters and other media outlets have reported that the Justice
Department had launched an expansive criminal investigation into the
relationships among hedge funds and firms that publish negative
reports on certain companies, often with the aim of sending the
stock lower.
The department has issued subpoenas to dozens of companies, which
included requests for funds' trading records, according to the
reports, bringing the issue of short selling to the forefront of
market attention.
The debate over the practice has long raged, with activist short
sellers saying they act as whistleblowers rooting out fraud or other
corporate misconduct, and critics saying they often spread false or
misleading information.
Spreading false information with the intent to move a stock price
could constitute market manipulation, but U.S. free speech
protections mean the bar for bringing such cases is high.
Mitts said the aim of his research is simply to shed more light on
short selling.
"My goal is to better understand how short reports affect the
markets. I appreciate when industry participants take the time to
engage with academics on these important questions."
Yet his critics are angry, including big-name investors Block of
Muddy Waters and Citron Research's Andrew Left, both of whom are
being scrutinized as part of the Justice Department probe, according
to the media reports.
Left said Mitts' analysis was fundamentally flawed because it did
not account for all the potential reasons behind trading patterns
that may appear to be suspicious, describing the study as "sloppy".
Block, who made his name outing fraud at Chinese companies, first
learned about Mitts in January 2019 when the law professor was
quoted in a news report about regulators looking into aggressive
short sellers, a source with direct knowledge of the situation said.
Initial interactions between the two men were friendly. Block
attended Mitts' class at Columbia in early 2019. That April, during
a public panel discussion featuring the two men, Mitts told the
moderator that he thought "Carson's a good American."
But the relationship has soured.
Last month, Block published a paper, "Distorting the Shorts,"
refuting Mitts' paper, in which he said the academic's work
consulting for companies was a conflict of interest.
Mitts told Reuters he stopped consulting work for targets of
activist short sellers in April 2020.
Block also argued that Mitts' analysis was misleading as the authors
of the majority of posts Mitts reviewed were not actually short the
stock concerned, according to disclosures required by Seeking Alpha.
Trading patterns Mitts cites as key evidence of manipulation may be
accounted for by corporate earnings reports rather than short
reports, the paper said.
"Mitts' 'Short and Distort' badly misrepresents the underlying
data," it added.
Mitts declined to comment on Block's paper.
(Writing and additional reporting by Michelle Price; Additional
reporting by Megan Davies and Lawrence Delevingne; Editing by
Paritosh Bansal and Pravin Char)
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