Article: Field of Schemes: David Einhorn’s latest short

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Field of Schemes: David Einhorn’s latest short

Richard Smith

NakedCapitalism, 15 October 2010

Einhorn is the famous Lehman short of 2008; he got a lot of flak from Clueless Charlie Gasparino for that. I seem to remember our own Lehman bear, Yves, getting snarled at by Charlie G somewhere along the line, too. But of course, Einhorn, via his vehicle Greenlight Capital, had it right; as did Yves (something that those decrying the “Yellow Journalism” of recent NC posts on “foreclosuregate” would do well to consider).

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Article: Notes on David Einhorn: The Predator in a Cute T-Shirt

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Notes on David Einhorn: The Predator in a Cute T-Shirt

Mark Mitchell

DeepCapture, 10 June 2010

I received an email a while back from Jim Brickman, a crony of short selling hedge fund manager David Einhorn, demanding that I post the Securities and Exchange Commission inspector general’s report on the commission’s investigation of Allied Capital. According to Brickman, the report proves that Einhorn was right about Allied being a massive fraud. Moreover, says Brickman, the report definitively establishes that Einhorn did not seek to drive down Allied’s stock price. The report, which I gladly post below, does nothing of the sort. I will discuss the report in further detail, but first a little history.

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Article: How “Activist Investors” David Einhorn and Dan Loeb Brought Their Special Talents to Bear On New Century Financial

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How “Activist Investors” David Einhorn and Dan Loeb Brought Their Special Talents to Bear On New Century Financial

Mark Mitchell

DeepCapture, 18 February 2010

You don’t hear much about it, but the March 2007 bankruptcy of a company called New Century Financial was arguably one of the most important events leading up to the financial crisis that nearly caused a second Great Depression.

It was the demise of New Century, then the nation’s second largest mortgage lender, that triggered the collapse of the market for collateralized debt obligations. And it was the collapse in the value of collateralized debt obligations (a majority of which contained New Century mortgages) that hobbled a number of big financial firms. Once hobbled, the likes of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers were ripe targets for unscrupulous hedge fund managers who amplified their problems by spreading exaggerated rumors while bombarding them with illegal naked short selling.

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Article: Shooting the Naked Messengers

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Shooting the Naked Messengers

Max Abelson

Observer, 13 January 2010

Last year, a 38-year-old named Judd Bagley found himself on Facebook, looking at the friend lists of reporters from The New York TimesThe Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Barron’s and Reuters, and of wildly important hedge fund managers like Dan Loeb and David Einhorn.

Eventually creating a fake account, one person led to another. These people were all friends, he saw, and their friends were friends, too. A new chapter of a crusade was born.

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Article: New Evidence Raises Questions About Kingsford Capital

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New Evidence Raises Questions About Kingsford Capital – Links To TheStreet.com Inc., Others

Mark Mitchell

Market Rap, 7 January 2010

A blog published by the University of North Carolina School of Journalism reported recently that Steve Cohen of hedge fund SAC Capital managed to kill a story by Reuters reporter Matt Goldstein. It seems that Goldstein was going to shed some light on allegations that Cohen engaged in insider trading. Cohen didn’t like that, and got in touch with Goldstein’s superiors.

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Article: Meet The Sith Lords: The 20 People Alleged To Be Part Of A Shadowy Short-Selling Conspiracy

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Meet The Sith Lords: The 20 People Alleged To Be Part Of A Shadowy Short-Selling Conspiracy

Kamelia Angelova

Business Insider, 18 December 2009

Last week, a list of journalists appeared on the internet, along with every single one of their Facebook friends.

The list, which included John Carney, Henry Blodget, and Joe Weisenthal, was assembled by the folks at Deepcapture.com, anti-naked short selling site affiliated with Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne.

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Article: The Naked Short Selling That Toppled Wall Street

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The Naked Short Selling That Toppled Wall Street

Mark Mitchell

DeepCapture, 2 October 2008

The Wall Street Journal stated in a lead editorial last week that the SEC was “reasonable” to “clamp down” on naked short selling. Well, that was progress of sorts, though one wonders how it could have taken all these years for the nation’s most important newspaper to suggest that it might be “reasonable” to put an end to criminal activity that has eviscerated hundreds of companies and destroyed countless lives.

And now that this criminal activity has been implicated in the Humpty Dumptying of our financial system, one grows wistful for the golden age of journalism when editorialists (people working for famous newspapers, not just cyber weirdos) would express a little outrage, demand that heads roll – muster something better than “reasonable” to describe the limpid “clamp down” of an SEC that bows in oily servitude to the very short-sellers who manhandled our markets.

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Article: Are Short Sellers to Blame for the Financial Crisis?

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Are Short Sellers to Blame for the Financial Crisis?

Bill Saporito

TIME, 18 September 2008

“It was sad to see Merrill go down as well,” said the voice from inside Lehman Brothers this week as he pondered his own future. “But at least they screwed the shorts. That was good to see.”

It was also, at least in the minds of many angry investment bank CEOs, a long time coming. In the months leading up to the current market chaos, the short sellers have been on the prowl. But now the witch hunt has begun. The shorts nailed Lehman and Bear Stearns by betting that their shares would continue to fall. And now they have Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs in their sights, sparking speculation that the last two remaining go-it-alone investment banking giants may have to find a deep-pocketed commercial bank to partner up with.

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Article: Banking crisis: Regulators look to curb naked ambition of the short sellers

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Banking crisis: Regulators look to curb naked ambition of the short sellers

Simon Bowers

The Guardian, 17 September 2008

Short sellers in New York and London are facing tough new regulations as market officials attempt to curb what they see as “abusive” attacks on the proper functioning of stock markets — particularly the pricing of banking and financial stocks.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission will tomorrow impose new rules designed to end “price manipulating” through aggressive short selling. Earlier this week the chancellor, Alistair Darling, signalled the Financial Services Authority was also looking at closer policing of certain short-selling activities.

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Article: A good summer for David Einhorn

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A good summer for David Einhorn

Tracy Alloway

Financial Times, 15 September 2008

The outspoken hedgie David Einhorn would have made a killing from his bets against Lehman Bros this summer. He first announced his position in April, when Lehman’s share price was at about $40, saying he had questions about the company’s balance sheet. Lehman stock is now under $4 — giving Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital a 90 per cent return according to some estimates.

Could the role of short-sellers like Einhorn give fresh fodder to the push for a ban on certain forms of short-selling then?

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Article: Banks Fear Next Move by Shorts

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Banks Fear Next Move by Shorts

Louise Story

The New York Times, 14 September 2008

In May, David Einhorn, one of the most vocal short-sellers on Wall Street, made no secret he was betting against Lehman Brothers.

Now, some investors are afraid that fund managers like him will take advantage of the climate of fear stirred up by the troubles of Lehman to target other weak financial firms whose declining share price would bring them rich rewards.

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