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    #11
    Originally posted by TASFarms View Post
    When you can sell shares or contracts that you don’t own but can “borrow” how is there not any manipulation
    But those same shorts all have to be bought back eventually. Putting a floor under the market.
    The exception being a penny stock which could actually go to zero and stay there.

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      #12
      What happens when they just make new contracts/stocks. Smoke and mirrors. How do you end up with negative futures market. The California power crisis over 2 decades ago was pure market manipulation. There was millions and millions poured into consultants to figure how to manipulate the market. When the power company had enough of being screwed they just produced what was paid for in the futures market. So to think AI can’t manipulate markets I would disagree.

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        #13
        Originally posted by TASFarms View Post
        When you can sell shares or contracts that you don’t own but can “borrow” how is there not any manipulation
        AlbertaFarmer5 has a decent reply to your question.

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by dave4441 View Post

          I cant get over how companies have tweeted prices and bullish info that is designed only to get the farmer NOT to sell his grain which increases the value of the grain companies long postion. Pea prices that are up to $2/bushel above the price they are actually willing to pay the when the farmer calls. And no one calls people out for that.

          I was once told by a trader to tell everyone exactly what I think. 50% will believe me and 50% won't and has no affect.
          Unless you attend a Viterra "marketing" webinar or meeting. Every one that I have gone to over the past 5 years can be summed up as "The best time to sell is now" .

          They were projecting a 6mmt canola carryout. I think AAFC is around 1.5.

          Boggles the mind why I bother reading their analysis.

          Comment


            #15
            Originally posted by LEP View Post

            Unless you attend a Viterra "marketing" webinar or meeting. Every one that I have gone to over the past 5 years can be summed up as "The best time to sell is now" .

            They were projecting a 6mmt canola carryout. I think AAFC is around 1.5.

            Boggles the mind why I bother reading their analysis.
            Yes Viterra only contacts me when markets are tough with a “special” and gloom of overproduction somewhere. Must be a sad lot there when the reps are meeting with their market analysts. Like an NFU meeting.

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              #16
              Originally posted by LEP View Post

              Unless you attend a Viterra "marketing" webinar or meeting. Every one that I have gone to over the past 5 years can be summed up as "The best time to sell is now" .

              They were projecting a 6mmt canola carryout. I think AAFC is around 1.5.

              Boggles the mind why I bother reading their analysis.
              Makes sense considering they are on the opposite side of the trade.

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by LEP View Post

                Unless you attend a Viterra "marketing" webinar or meeting. Every one that I have gone to over the past 5 years can be summed up as "The best time to sell is now" .

                They were projecting a 6mmt canola carryout. I think AAFC is around 1.5.

                Boggles the mind why I bother reading their analysis.
                I've never yet called an auction mart when they didn't tell me that the next sale is always the best day of the year to sell.

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                  #18
                  If I take your shares in company c and sell for $20 less a share. I make some money. You didn’t want to sell any of your shares in which the price for you to sell would have to be higher. But I borrowed your shares and sold to someone else. There for your shares that you didn’t sell just lost price. Kind of a simplified explanation of short selling. It’s pure manipulation

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by TASFarms View Post
                    If I take your shares in company c and sell for $20 less a share. I make some money. You didn’t want to sell any of your shares in which the price for you to sell would have to be higher. But I borrowed your shares and sold to someone else. There for your shares that you didn’t sell just lost price. Kind of a simplified explanation of short selling. It’s pure manipulation
                    How do you sell for $20 less per share? You can only sell (short) at whatever the bid is at that moment. And why would you sell for $20 less, even if you could? The entire point of shorting is to sell as high as possible , not to sell below market, how would you make money when you have to buy your shorts back, if you sold them at below market value to start with?

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                      #20
                      Short selling you make money on the way down. If your long you make money on the way up

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