Germany’s regulator bans short-selling in Wirecard
The firm’s share price slid after allegations of false accounting surfaced
THOSE WHO profit from the misery of others are not often popular. Short-sellers, who try to make money by selling borrowed shares and buying them back later at a lower price, have long been viewed with suspicion. They are blamed for exacerbating price falls so that they can reap bigger returns. In times of market stress authorities often ban them. In 1610 regulators in Amsterdam forbade short-selling, blaming it for a fall in the value of the Dutch East India Company. Two centuries later Napoleon prohibited it as an act of treason.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Shooting the messenger”
Finance & economics February 23rd 2019
- Countries are seeking help to deal with corporate tax avoidance
- A gamble in France could cost UBS dear
- A surprising number of North Korean refugees send money home
- Germany’s regulator bans short-selling in Wirecard
- Why private equity appeals
- The global soyabean market has been upended
- A new book argues weakened communities threaten liberal democracy
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