What’s going on here? Short sellers took aim at Temenos AG after a scandalous report, wiping $2.1 billion in value from the Swiss fintech firm. What does this mean? Activist investment firm Hindenburg Research has successfully taken on empires owned by the likes of Gautam Adani, Jack Dorsey, and Carl Icahn, wiping billions from their stock and often collapsing entire firms. This time, Hindenburg has accused Tenemos – which sells software to the banking sector – of seriously bad management. After a four-month investigation and interviews with 25 ex-employees, Hindenburg has alleged that Tenemos fiddled with earnings figures. The allegations alone have pushed Temenos’s shares into freefall, so much so that the fintech firm is now only worth a third of its 2019 peak. Why should I care? For markets: Not-so-dumb money. Activists like Hindenburg can cash in by “short selling” – borrowing stocks from a broker, selling them, and buying them back for a cheaper price later to pocket the difference. Savvy retail investors have used that to their advantage. Empowered by social media platforms like Reddit, they collectively buy shares of those heavily shorted stocks. That pushes their prices higher, forcing short sellers to buy back shares to cover their losing bets. And that keeps the stocks heading upward. Problem is, these “short-squeeze” strategies produce rallies as fast as they are tall, with stocks soon tumbling from their newfound heights. The bigger picture: Stock sellers are market Marvels. Short sellers often get the villain edit, but they’re needed to keep the market in check. They essentially send out a red alert when they bet against a stock. Investors tend to heed the warning, selling at least some of their shares in the company. So long as the short sellers’ research is legit, the resulting lower stock price should more accurately represent a company’s true value. That keeps the market fair and makes bubbles less likely – all in all, pretty heroic efforts. |