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Proposal NSCC-005 is raising margin requirements on short sellers by 2500%! That means their minimum margin requirement is going from $10,000 to $250,000.
This just means that short seller would need to buy back shares or they have to deposit a lot more money to continue their short by September 3rd, 2021.
Proposal NSCC-005 is raising margin requirements on short sellers by 2500%! That means their minimum margin requirement is going from $10,000 to $250,000.
This just means that short seller would need to buy back shares or they have to deposit a lot more money to continue their short by September 3rd, 2021.
Proposal NSCC-005 is raising margin requirements on short sellers by 2500%! That means their minimum margin requirement is going from $10,000 to $250,000.
This just means that short seller would need to buy back shares or they have to deposit a lot more money to continue their short.
Why is SBH showing 117% owned by institution and 40% short of the float?
Is that even possible? or just over-shorted?
$GME 149% shares held by insiders and institutions combined
In case you missed it on Yahoo Financial
% Held by Insiders 1 27.33%
% Held by Institutions 1 122.04%
Shares Short (Feb 12, 2021) 4 16.47M
GME ??????
1-27-2017 GME 54.7% of today's volume is short
Symbol: GME
Short Volume: 15692871
Total Volume: 28687984
Source:
http://regsho.finra.org/CNMSshvol20210127.txt
Don't set stoploss guys... if you're watching because MM can see it and drop the price to get your shares. imho
Don't set stoploss guys... if you're watching because MM can see it and drop the price to get your shares. imho
Don't set stoploss guys... if you are watching because MM can see it and drop the price to get your shares. imho
Anyone nervous or just me?
Shorts need to cover...
Been on iHub for several months. FMNA holders are loyal similar to TSLA, and they won't sell their shares till above $5 (and some above $40). Shorts would have a really hard time to cover. imho
Federal National Mortgage Association : News Release - Fannie Mae Prices First Capital Markets Risk
http://www.4-traders.com/FEDERAL-NATIONAL-MORTGAGE-6383239/news/Federal-National-Mortgage-Association--News-Release-Fannie-Mae-Prices-First-Capital-Markets-Risk-17366160/
WASHINGTON, DC - Fannie Mae (FNMA/OTC) today announced that it priced its inaugural credit risk sharing transaction under its Connecticut Avenue Securities (C-deals) series. The Series 2013-C01 transaction provides an additional avenue to manage the credit risk on the company's guaranty book of business. The $675 million note offering priced today and is scheduled to settle on October 24. This is the first in a series of planned C-deal offerings aimed to help reduce taxpayer risk and attract private capital to the housing market.
"We are excited to bring this inaugural deal to the market, and are encouraged by the broad and diverse investor demand," said Andrew Bon Salle, executive vice president for underwriting, pricing and capital markets at Fannie Mae. "By sharing risk with investors, Fannie Mae will continue to provide much needed liquidity to the market while attracting private capital participation in the housing market. The Connecticut Avenue Securities program was structured so that it does not impact the To Be Announced (TBA) market, and is scalable and flexible enough to incorporate market feedback into future issuances."
C-deal notes are bonds issued by Fannie Mae that protect it against credit risk. The amount of periodic principal and ultimate principal paid by Fannie Mae is determined by the performance of a large and diverse reference pool of more than 112,000 single family mortgage loans with an outstanding unpaid principal balance of $27 billion. This reference pool consists of a random selection of eligible loans acquired in the third quarter of 2012, part of Fannie Mae's new book of business underwritten using strong credit standards and enhanced risk controls. The loans included in the first C-deal transaction are fixed rate, generally 30-year term, fully amortizing mortgages with LTV ratios between 60 percent and 80 percent.
C-deal notes are different than other Fannie Mae securities and debt issuances. When Fannie Mae issues fully guaranteed single-family MBS, it retains all of the credit (mortgage default) risk associated with losses on the underlying mortgage loans. In return, Fannie Mae receives a guaranty fee. When issuing credit risk sharing securities, Fannie Mae transfers some of the retained credit risk to investors in exchange for sharing a portion of the guaranty fee payments. Investors in C-deals may experience a full or partial loss of their initial principal investment, depending upon the credit performance of the mortgage loans in the related reference pool.
Pricing for the M-1 tranche was one-month LIBOR plus a spread of 200 basis points. Pricing for the M-2 tranche was one month LIBOR plus a spread of 525 basis points. About 75 broadly-diversified investors participated in the offering, including asset managers, mutual funds, pension funds, hedge funds, insurance companies, banks, and REITs. Fannie Mae retained the first loss and senior piece of the structure, as well as a vertical slice of the M1 and M2 tranches in order to align its interests with investors throughout the life of the deal.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch was the lead structuring manager and joint bookrunner on Fannie Mae's inaugural C-deal and acted as advisor to Fannie Mae on the development of the program. Credit Suisse was the co-lead manager and joint bookrunner. Co-managers included Barclays, Morgan Stanley, and RBS, and CastleOak Securities participated as a selling group member.
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac to go after more strategic defaulters
http://www.latimes.com/business/realestate/la-fi-lew-20131013,0,7334270.story
Anyone thinking of skating on mortgages owned by either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac may want to think again. As a result of new government reports, the two companies say they are going to do a better job of going after so-called strategic defaulters.
Fannie and Freddie can pursue judgments against borrowers who walk away from their loans even though they have the ability to make their payments. That's called a strategic default, and many borrowers are taking that step — typically throwing in the towel because their homes are no longer worth as much as they owe.
But when their homes are sold at foreclosure and the proceeds are not enough to cover their outstanding loan balances, it creates a deficiency for which many defaulters either don't realize they are liable or don't care.
To date, the two government-sponsored enterprises, which are now highly profitable after five years of running in the red, haven't done a particularly good job at pursuing deficiency judgments, according to scathing reports from the Office of the Inspector General at the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
But the FHFA says it is going to make the GSEs clean up their acts. And that should serve as fair warning to those who can pay but fail to do so.
As the inspector general's office says time and again in the reports, chasing down strategic defaulters can not only cut the enterprises' losses on bad loans but can also "serve as a deterrent to those who would chose to strategically default on their mortgage obligations."
Going after strategic defaulters is big money. According to the report by the inspector general's office criticizing Freddie Mac's lax practices, the company has left billions on the table.
The report found that Freddie Mac, which has received some $71 billion in taxpayer assistance since it was taken into conservatorship by the FHFA in September 2008, did not refer nearly 58,000 foreclosures with estimated deficiencies of some $4.6 billion for collection by its vendors.
Of course, only a percentage of that amount might have been recoverable because some borrowers are simply tapped out. But because the bad loans weren't even considered for recovery, Freddie Mac "eliminated any possibility" for collecting what is owed, the report said.
Now extrapolate that to Freddie Mac's entire holdings and you can see we're talking some really big money here. As of December, the big secondary mortgage market company had nearly 50,000 foreclosures still on its books, carrying a value of some $4.3 billion. And as of March 31, it held 364,000 mortgages that were 60 days or more delinquent and were, therefore, likely foreclosure candidates.
Fannie Mae's portfolio of troubled assets is much larger. At the end of last year, it owned more than 105,000 foreclosed properties valued at $9.5 billion and carried a "substantial" shadow inventory of 576,000 seriously delinquent mortgages that were 90 days late or more and likely to end up in foreclosure.
It does a better job than the smaller Freddie Mac, according to the inspector general's office. But in a separate report, Fannie Mae earned a slap on the wrist for not taking any action on nearly 30,000 accounts because statutes of limitation had expired or were about to. For the same reason, the report says, it failed to pursue deficiencies of some 15,000 accounts that already had been reviewed for collection by its vendors.
Several factors influence the decision to pursue deficiency recoveries. But most important, state laws dictate timelines for filing claims. Some states do not allow deficiency judgments at all, but they are fair game in more than 30 states and the District of Columbia. But 10 have short windows — only 30 to 180 days in which collections are allowed.
But not going after defaulters where it is permissible to do so not only reduces the chances of recovering potentially billions, the reports point out, it "incentivizes" other borrowers to walk away from mortgages they can afford to pay.
The new inspector general reports are a follow-up to one issued a year ago that called the FHFA, the agency that oversees Fannie and Freddie, on the carpet for failing to provide enough guidance about effectively pursuing and collecting deficiency judgments wherever and whenever possible.
In September, in response to a draft of these latest reports, the agency set down requirements for both enterprises to maintain formal policies and procedures for managing their deficiency collection processes, establish a set of controls to monitor their collection vendors and comply with state laws in an effort to preserve their ability to pursue collections.
And by the first of the year, the FHFA said it will begin to more closely monitor the effectiveness of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's deficiency judgment processes. That's government-speak for "We'll be watching you from now on, so you'd better get your collection house in order."
Love your chart.
Thanks for your explanation.
Are the shorts trying to keep the price down?
How is it possible that several million shares exchanged hands and the price just changed a couple of pennies? If I see people buying my shares, I would hold off and wait for it to go higher. Only reason I can think of is shorts are trying to keep the price down.
Was the government shorting?
And due to the shutdown it rebounded?
This is it...
Bringing down the 50 MA then shoot it up. imho
Will there be short squeeze tomorrow?
Go up to $5.40 like FNMA?
True professionals working here...
Price increased from $1.02 to $1.24 (20%) in three trading days with low volume hiding under the radar. imho
Will low volume push price higher?
Speculations or accumulations or manipulations, I think just look at the next couple of days. If it continues to close higher for the remaining of the week then WMIH will get a lot of attention. imho
Wait and buy on dip. Entry point coming... imho
Buy from news. Can it break $1.48?
Excellent volume.
Get above $1.36 to start a run...
Buy at end of day if low volume traded today...
Comparing to 6/26/13, we're at the same price range yet there's low volume means smart money loading up. Not true selling. imho
Shorts use this as leverage...
Stock gets shorted and money used to invest in other equities and turnaround and shares bought back. Also a good target for MM, making 2-3% daily.
Run starts after you see persistent short increase in prices for 2-3 days. That's when these people are covering. imho
Tomorrow is really important!
If we go green then it'll explode after conference call... if red then just hype...
Accumulation now.. MM set price low to trigger sells. imho
Nice open.. wait for squeeze
hidden rules of the market...
If the prices are driven in extreme low will cause a selling panic such that it would take stronger force (more money) to drive it up. And who wants to buy at $1.50 if it was just $0.01 yesterday. imho
short... be careful
don't get squeezed like last time, price move to the path of least resistance imho
Date|Symbol|ShortVolume|ShortExemptVolume|TotalVolume|Market
20130724|FNMA|6123116|0|17557825|O
20130723|FNMA|9540104|0|28948159|O
20130722|FNMA|14277101|0|35096434|O
20130719|FNMA|2549638|0|12562475|O
20130718|FNMA|2314057|0|8374291|O
http://regsho.finra.org/regsho-Index.html
Good indicator of settlement...
or anything that's positive is when we see the pps go up 0.01 to 0.02 daily... why? If there's a settlement/anything positive won't you think the MM are the first to know about it and cover? IMO
WamuQ shorted...
20110727|WAMUQ|5107894|0|10670463|O
20110726|WAMUQ|4970793|0|15403758|O
http://regsho.finra.org/FORFshvol20110727.txt
"THIS IS IT..."
Go Wamu
Excellent advice. GO WAMU
Emotions will ruin your trade... professionals make money by playing with your emotions...
IMO
If you don't see blood, you don't see money... sad IMO
0.01 is a good price to enter... IMO
Consolidating. Buy some shares now while you can.
IMO
70.8 million shares shorted in past 4 days
Date|Symbol|ShortVolume|ShortExemptVolume|TotalVolume|Market
20110615|MSOA|41097885|0|95953681|O
20110616|MSOA|20182439|0|77778693|O
20110617|MSOA|6386468|0|18402368|O
20110620|MSOA|3153299|0|7522058|O
http://regsho.finra.org/regsho-Index.html