Short-sellers are endangered. That is bad news for markets
Nobody likes shorts, but they provide an invaluable service
If you want to be liked, don’t be a short-seller. Some other investors might defend you, at least in the abstract, as an important part of a healthy and efficient market. But to most you are—at best—a ghoul who profits from the misfortune of others. At worst, you are a corporate raider who bets that honest firms will go bust and then spreads lies about them until they do. Even your defenders will melt away if you pick the wrong target (shares they own) or the wrong moment (a crash in which many are losing money but you are making it).
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “A good time for bad news”
Finance & economics December 2nd 2023
- Welcome to a golden age for workers
- Real wages have risen in America and are rebounding in Europe
- China edges towards a big bail-out
- An unruly OPEC is causing problems for Russia and Saudi Arabia
- How to get African oil out of the ground without Western lenders
- Short-sellers are endangered. That is bad news for markets
- Why economists are at war over inequality
Discover more
The great-man theory of Wall Street
Why finance is still dominated by bold individuals
Hong Kong’s property slump may be terminal
Demographics and geopolitics will make a recovery harder
Why everyone wants to lend to weak companies
An unanticipated side-effect of Donald Trump’s election victory
American veterans now receive absurdly generous benefits
An enormous rise in disability payments may complicate debt-reduction efforts
Why Black Friday sales grow more annoying every year
Nobody is to blame. Everyone suffers
Trump wastes no time in reigniting trade wars
Canada and Mexico look likely to suffer