GameStop Just Plunged Another 50% But A Movie Is On The Way
The short squeeze in GameStop is over but hey, there's a movie coming right up.
Short Squeeze In Reverse
Yesterday I asked GameStop Plunged 30% Today, Is the Short Squeeze Over?
This was my answer:
Squeeze Likely Over
My guess is the squeeze is over. Hedge funds have covered their shorts. And we have a three surge stage that frequently marks tops in short squeezes.
If my thesis is correct, GameStop will go back where it came from. The market makers will pull bids as they did today.
Today offers solid confirmation. People who had huge gains need to preserve them before they are gone.
GameStop fell all the way to $74 from a short squeeze high on January 28 of $483.00. That's a 4-day intraday high to low decline of 84.7%.
The hedge funds that covered at $483 are really smarting.
Flashback January 30
Let's flashback to my January 30 post Naked Shorting is Illegal: So How the Hell was GameStop 140% Short?
Movie Coming Up
The book on the World's Biggest Casino is already out . I confidently predict the movie is coming up.
Two main characters are ready identified. Vlad Tenev the founder/CEO of Robinhood and DeepF&ckingValue the 30 year old engineer in Boston on the WallStreetBets side.
The CEO and the CIO (the villains) at the Melvin and Citadel hedge funds will be part of the main cast members.
Those who produced “The Big Short” will handle this one the same way.
Movie in the Works
Yesterday, Quartz reported the GameStop Saga is Already Headed to Hollywood.
Following a bidding war, MGM acquired the rights to adapt Ben Mezrich’s GameStop book proposal, The Antisocial Network, Deadline reported. Mezrich previously wrote a book about Facebook’s founding, The Accidental Billionaires, which became the Oscar-winning 2010 film The Social Network. Early Facebook co-founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, who were portrayed in The Social Network by actor Armie Hammer, will executive-produce the film based on Mezrich’s as-yet-unwritten book.
Buying the movie rights to a book proposal—not an actual book—is unusual, but it underscores how ready-made the GameStop saga is for Hollywood. It’s also further evidence of how quickly the film industry needs to move in order to secure potentially lucrative intellectual property nowadays.
That was surprisingly fast.
It may be now permissible for your personal accounts but institutions can and do do it. Likewise they short with options and say they are "hedging". If I own $1,000,000 of the S&P and short $100,000 Apple stock they can claim it at hedging even though it is even more than the risk they have in Apple. Exxon is a good example of this behavior.