Shorting The Market
The Investor's Podcast Network
The Investor’s Podcast Network is a business podcast network. Our main show “We Study Billionaires” has 150M+ downloads.
By?Matthew Gutierrez,?Shawn O'Malley , and?Weronika Pycek ?· June 23, 2023
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It may come as little surprise to hear that the U.S. stock market is the largest in the world, dominating global market indexes???
But Goldman Sachs’ economists expect that to?change , with total market capitalization in emerging markets surpassing the U.S. and other developed countries within the next decade.
America’s share of global stock market value sits at 42% today, but they project that’ll fall to 27% by 2050 as countries like India gain ground.
The projections reflect shifting economic power. Still, U.S. stocks enjoy considerable advantages, including many of the world’s top tech companies (at least for now.)
??What do you think, readers?
—?Shawn
Here’s the rundown:
Today, we'll discuss the?three biggest stories in markets:
All this, and more, in just?5 minutes to read.
POP QUIZ
?As a percentage of its float (shares available for trading), which stock is the most shorted? Scroll to the end for the answer!
CHART(S) OF THE DAY
EM = Emerging Markets, DM = Developed Markets
IN THE NEWS
???Bets Against Stock Market Pile Up (Yahoo )
Short sellers?— those betting prices will fall — get a bad rap, but they play an important role in markets, expressing negative concerns into prices.
Near-record bets that the S&P 500 will fall (exceeding?$1 trillion?this month) illustrate traders’ and investors’ lack of faith in this year’s “narrow” 14% rally, where just a few tech companies have fueled gains.
Even more ironically, because short sellers utilize borrowed money, or more specifically, borrowed stocks, they can be forced out of their trades, which actually further adds to stock rallies.
Why it matters:
This opens them up to a lot of risk, though. When you buy a stock, you have?limited downside?and?technically unlimited upside?(you can only lose what you invested, but stock prices can rise infinitely — at least in theory.)
Short sellers face the opposite:?They can make a max 100% return if the stock goes to zero but face unlimited losses if prices keep rising.
What happens next is anyone’s guess. Short sellers may be right, and their concerns may foreshadow a reverse in the S&P 500’s 2023 rally, or the market may grind higher, aided by short squeezes.
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???A $55 Million IPO For A Piece of Art??(WSJ )
A?$55 million masterpiece?is going public. This is not a drill.
A portrait by the late British painter Francis Bacon will be publicly listed this summer, despite?rising rates?pushing some investors away from art investing.
Artex has plans to float about?$1 billion?worth of paintings over the next few months. Each painting will have its IPO. Artex is one of many companies trying to "democratize" high-end artwork.
Masterworks, the best-known business in the industry, has offered fractionalized art worth more than?$700 million?to its investors since the firm launched six years ago.
The returns haven't been anything to scoff at: Between 1995 and 2022, masterpieces from the post-1945 era gained?12.6% a year.?The S&P 500 rose about?9%?yearly, and U.S. corporate bonds gained?4.9%?over the same period.
Why it matters:
The idea of "democratizing" art derives from "fractional" ownership models, where smaller investors (the average Joe) who don't have millions to shell out on a single painting can access the very top of the art market, where true wealth can be made over time.
Why??Ultraloose monetary policy?is the biggest reason, as?falling or low real interest rates?have almost always coincided with rising art prices, as investors look elsewhere, like art, for meaningful returns.
MORE HEADLINES
???Warren Buffett’s lifetime charitable giving?tops ?a staggering $51 billion
???I-95 to?re-open ?less than two weeks after collapsing in Philadelphia
???Study?finds ?57% of Americans are ‘uncomfortable’ with their level of emergency savings
???A Musk-Zuckerberg?fight ?could generate $1 billion
???GSK Settles Zantac Cancer Lawsuit?(Bloomberg )
GSK, a London-based biopharma company, has settled?a U.S. lawsuit?with a man named James Goetz, who claimed that its now discontinued heartburn medication, Zantac, caused his cancer.
Goetz, a long-term Zantac user, sued after the 2019 discovery that Zantac contained a likely carcinogen, NDMA. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)?removed Zantac from the market in 2020?when they found NDMA formed in the drug, either during storage or high temperatures.
In a statement, GSK revealed that a confidential settlement had been reached, leading to?the dismissal of the case filed in a California state court.
Why it matters:
The decision to settle establishes?a?precedent, potentially influencing the outcomes of settlements in related cases.
Last year, the bellwether trials in the Zantac litigation?named several leading pharmaceutical companies as defendants,?spurring a plunge in their stock prices that week.
However, in December, a Florida judge?dismissed the evidence?supporting claims that the heartburn medication Zantac could lead to cancer as “junk science,” thereby exempting the drug manufacturers from over?5,000 lawsuits. And this more recent settlement further alleviates concerns about the financial fallout from Zantac.
TRIVIA ANSWER
With almost?57% ?of its shares being sold short currently,?Carvana?is the most shorted U.S. stock as a percentage of float.
SEE YOU NEXT TIME!
That's it for today on?We Study Markets !?
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