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SHORT
SELLING THE ROAD TO REDEMPTIONS
by Brady Willett
FallStreet.com
August 14, 2007
With the financial markets
doing their best impression of a tinderbox waiting for a spark, it is
not easy to use the word ‘oversold’ without cracking a smile. After
all, if the S&P 500 - which closed less than 1-point below its
200 DMA yesterday - was really ‘oversold’ it would not normally
be trading only 6.4% off of its recent highs (market corrections are
generally -10% and bear markets are -20%).
Needless to say, this
is not a normal stock market, and these are hardly normal times. Rather,
the largely secretive dealings of hedge funds control the tape, and
unpredictable capital flows from central bankers and foreign investors
can swing asset prices wildly about. Talk all you want about corporate
America’s attractive balance sheet, or those beautiful trailing P/Es,
this market is controlled by unknown and volatile forces.
Incidentally, while on
the topic of P/Es, isn’t it amusing to see Abby Joseph Cohen go on
about how attractive forward P/E multiples are given that she
ignored P/Es completely when concocting her bullish biases during the
late 1990s stock market mania? Apparently corporate fundamentals are
important to Ms. Cohen, that is so long as everyone isn’t acting like
a bunch of raving lunatics (in which case she joins the party and
ignores any and all of the ‘fundamentals’).
Regardless, amidst all
the uncertainty and bailout efforts happening today, a couple of lesser
covered events could make for a more volatile marketplace over the next
two weeks.
More
Hedge Fund Confessions?
“Wednesday marks
45 days before the end of the quarter, the deadline by which most hedge
fund investors must notify the funds if they want to redeem their
investments.” NYT
As if hedge fund
investors do not have enough to worry about, a wave of redemptions could
sweep over hedge-land in the next two sessions. Does this mean more
funds will announce that since NAVs are incalculable redemptions are
halted? If so, market reaction to these announcements may not be
favorable.
From
Credit Crunch To Short Squeeze?
One item of interest
not getting much play today is short selling. The uptick rule was
ditched on July 6, 2007, and since then the NYSE has released only one
short interest report. You guessed it, short interest hit a record
high in July – its fifth monthly record in a row.

Not only does the NYSE say
that this the most heavily shorted market in history (at more than $560
billion in shares short), but that more than $218 billion in short
positions have been added since July 2006.

Given that the short
seller’s padded their positions even as stocks hit record highs
earlier this year, the speculation that the shorts are going to stick
around for awhile has merit. Nevertheless, there remains the
possibility that the shorts were dangerously front-running the highly
anticipated SEC rule change rather than making sound long-term bets
against stocks. Moreover, you have to concede that with gold unable to
get kick-started and central banks aggressively eying the market’s
liquidity situation, there exists the possibility for a short
covering/relief rally from hell. Did I mention the S&P 500 ended
less than 1-point below its 200 DMA yesterday? Is this not a good enough
level for the Cohen’s to hop back in?
A
Couple of Events…
Assuming hedge fund
redemptions do not slam the market first, the short selling data for
August, which will be released next week, could play an important role
in setting the tone for the markets leading into September. Quite
frankly, at what point do even the most steadfast bears have to open up
to the possibility that the tinderbox may not be overvalued stock
prices, but the shorts that have made record bets against stocks?

As contrarily bullish
as some of the above charts may seem, I happen to think that we are
closer to a 10% correction than to a notable short covering rally.
Moreover, I also think that that the blowups will outnumber the bailouts
in the months ahead. In other words, while hedge fund redemption
season and the actions of short sellers are two potentially big events
worth talking about, remember that this market is being controlled by
unknown and volatile forces, at least over the near term.
Incidentally, why all
the fuss about an S&500 that has not even reached a 7% decline (or
the intraday loss the S&P 500 recorded in a single session
back in April 2000)? Did I mention the S&P 500 ended less than
1-point below its 200 DMA yesterday?


© 2007 Brady Willett
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