Betting against Trump's stocks has made some traders tens of millions – The Mercury News

NEW YORK – Rarely has it been so profitable to influence Donald Trump to fail.

Just ask a gaggle of hard-core Wall Street investors, mostly amateurs, who collectively made tens of tens of millions of dollars last month by betting that the stock price of his social media company – Truth Social – would rise despite massive buying Trump loyalists and Wilde will proceed to say no with swings that always reflect the most recent polls, lawsuits and outbursts from the candidate on Truth Social himself.

Several of those investors interviewed by The Associated Press say their bearish gambles on “put” options and other trading tools are driven less by their personal feelings in regards to the former president (most don't like him) than by their belief within the dismal underlying financial data driven by an organization that made less money last 12 months than the common Wendy's hamburger franchise.

“This company doesn’t make any money. … It makes no sense,” said promoting executive Elle Stange of Boise, Idaho, who estimates she made $1,300 betting against Trump Media & Technology stocks. “He’s not as great a businessman as he thinks he is. Many of his businesses fail quickly.”

Jeff Cheung, a Seattle-based IT security specialist, says, “It’s guaranteed to go to zero.”

On Friday morning, a month after Trump Media's initial public offering catapulted the stock to $66.22, it plunged to $38.49. An AP evaluation of information from research firms FactSet and S3 Partners shows that investors using puts and “short sales” have made no less than $200 million in paper profits to this point, excluding put costs, which vary from trade to trade .

Still, amateur traders, most of whom risk not more than a couple of thousand dollars per share, say the stock is simply too volatile to declare victory just yet. So now they're cashing in a bit, running other bets, and sneaking a peek at the most recent stock moves within the office cubicle, on the kitchen table, and even on the bathroom.

There have been many scary moments, including last week when DJT, the ex-president's initials and stock ticker, rose nearly 40% in two days.

“I don't know which way the stock is going,” says day trader Richard Persaud of Schenectady, N.Y., as he looks at his iPhone amid the rise. “It’s so incredibly overrated.”

Many who spoke to the AP say there’s an added political advantage knowing that their bets helped cut the worth of Trump's 65 percent stake in half. If a few of their predictions are correct, they might sooner or later push it to zero, making it unimaginable for him to pay his large legal bills or finance his Republican presidential campaign.

You still have an extended technique to go. Trump's stake continues to be price $4 billion.

Typically, investors who bet that a stock will fall will do quite a lot of homework, especially a daring breed of hedge fund traders called “short sellers.” They pore over financial reports, develop expertise in an industry, check with competitors and even turn to “forensic accountants” to seek out hidden weaknesses within the books.

In the case of Trump Media, this just isn’t needed. The Sarasota, Fla.-based company's 100-page financial report lays all of it out: a deluge of losses, $58 million last 12 months, on a tiny $4 million in revenue from promoting and other sources.

The losses are so great, Trump Media's auditor wrote within the report, that they “cast significant doubt about the company's ability to continue as a going concern.”

A brief seller's dream? Or is it a nightmare?

Amateur trader Manny Marotta has two computer screens at home, one for work, the opposite that displays the movements of DJT stock, where he can estimate how much it goes up or down.

Things weren't looking so good earlier this week.

The legal author from suburban Cleveland had made gains of around $4,000 in recent weeks with “put” options. But that morning on the screen, investors, presumably wealthy, were buying large amounts of DJT stock, driving the stock higher again.

“My options are worth less every minute,” says Marotta, adding of DJT: “It's being manipulated. That's crazy.”

Waiting for the stock to fall is especially painful for “short sellers,” who pay a fee to borrow shares of others. The idea is to sell them quickly, assuming you may later buy the identical number for less expensive before having to return them to the lender. This allows short sellers to pocket the difference minus the fee, which is generally nominal.

In the case of DJT, the fee is anything but nominal.

At the start of this month, it was trading at 565% per 12 months, meaning short sellers had just two months before potential gains could be eaten up by fees even when the stock fell to zero. That's a rate to this point off the charts that only three other stocks have beaten it recently, in accordance with data from Boston University's Karl Diether and Wharton's Itamar Drechsler, who studied short selling 20 years ago have employed.

Add to that the huge purchases by Trump supporters who see this as a technique to support their candidate, and the losses could quickly multiply.

“It’s scary,” says Drechsler, who compares Trump stock buyers to die-hard sports fans. “It’s everything you hope the stock market isn’t.”

Trump Media spokeswoman Shannon Devine said the corporate was in a “strong financial position,” with $200 million in money and no debt, and said the AP was “picking on admitted Trump antagonists.”

Another danger for the stock is a “short squeeze”. If the worth rises sharply, it could trigger a rush from short sellers who fear they’ve made a nasty bet to right away return their borrowed shares and cut their losses. And so that they start buying stocks to exchange the stocks they borrowed and sold, and this buying tends to negatively impact them and drive up the worth, which in turn scares off other short sellers who then do the identical buy, setting off a vicious cycle of price hikes.

“If DJT starts rising, you're going to see the mother of all squeezes,” said Ihor Dusaniwsky, a short-selling expert at S3 Partners who spent three a long time at Morgan Stanley helping investors borrow stocks. “This is not for the faint of heart.”

“Lock-up” agreements prohibit Trump and other DJT executives from selling their shares until September. This puts the free float, i.e. the variety of shares that could be traded each day by others, at a dangerously tiny 29% of the whole shares that may sooner or later flood the market. This signifies that a big buy or sell on any given day that will barely move a typical stock can send DJT soaring or crashing.

The free float is smaller than that of most other notoriously volatile stocks. At their smallest levels, AMC, GameStop and Shake Shack each had greater than double the float.

Cheung, a Seattle trader, sees DJT's unusual characteristics as a reason to bet against the stock moderately than shrink back from it. When the lock-up period ends, he predicts, the ex-president will actually sell his shares, which can unsettle the market and cause the worth to fall sharply. And even when he doesn't, other insiders whose lock-up periods are expiring will fear he’ll and can act quickly to get a very good price before it falls.

“The first one that sells out will last the most,” Cheung says. “Everyone will sell.”

Still, he doesn't wish to lose money within the meantime, so Cheung offsets a few of his “put” bets by buying “calls.” The latter are also derivatives, but have the other effect and repay when the stock rises. Cheung hopes that with everyone getting cash, whether with puts or calls, he’ll make enough on one to greater than offset the loss on the opposite.

If all of this seems too complicated for you, there’s a far easier technique to earn money betting against Trump.
Casino-style offshore betting sites are taking bets on the 2024 election, and a few have even declared President Joe Biden the favourite.

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