Fun fact: Buddy of mine wanted to buy Petrobras, a Brazilian oil company. By mistake he bought a company with a similar name, that was basically an electricity provider in Argentina. In the end it ended up a better investment. :-)
> I hope you didn’t get too clever about this. For instance, if you noticed that everyone was buying the wrong Zoom and decided to profit from their stupidity by selling ZOOM short, then (1) you have done poorly (ZOOM is up almost 900% year to date) and (2) now you might not be able to close out your short.
This also happened with a piece of shit OTC Facebook app developer called SNAP Interactive when Snapchat was going IPO. I met their CEO at a conference in NYC, and he literally had business cards printed out touting how high their market cap got during this and their subsequent message board pumping.
Rational/efficient markets don't mean no irrational players. It just means that those players get punished for their irrationality, which is exactly what happened here. If anything efficient markets hypothesis is based on the fact that low/bad information is penalized which in turn makes markets more efficient ;)
I don't know. The purported rational market (which I don't really believe in) would have corrected this problem by selling shorts, among other things. However such trading IRL would have turned out to be a really bad idea because of just what has happened. So it's plausible that knowledge of the non-freeness of the market prevented an efficient price from being reached for this security.
Is it really up to the SEC to do this? It sets a precedent. Now will they be liable if they don't warn people about other companies with similar names? With 3 and 4 letter tickers, many companies are 1 letter off.
ZOOM has not filled anything to the SEC for 5 years now. It's a dead chinese zombie shell corporation so this is more akin to keeping the stock exchanges clean of junk. Especially since that junk only exists to harm.
COKE is routinely mistaken for Coca Cola, but the SEC doesn't intervene because COKE is a real operating company. So I think this is not a sign of overreach from the SEC.
Trading can be suspended to protect investors to give everybody time to cool off. I don't think suspending one defunct company for large volume of erroneus trades is much different.
Why do they call them investors? People who haven't even briefly read financial filings for the company they are going to buy? They are called speculators, not investors.
[+] [-] newdude116|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mandeepj|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] thaumasiotes|6 years ago|reply
> I hope you didn’t get too clever about this. For instance, if you noticed that everyone was buying the wrong Zoom and decided to profit from their stupidity by selling ZOOM short, then (1) you have done poorly (ZOOM is up almost 900% year to date) and (2) now you might not be able to close out your short.
[+] [-] throwaway724|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dan-robertson|6 years ago|reply
In some Asian markets they use numbers for tickets (and some people invest based on superstitions about those numbers)
[+] [-] ajross|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mardifoufs|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] asdfasgasdgasdg|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] fortran77|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mardifoufs|6 years ago|reply
COKE is routinely mistaken for Coca Cola, but the SEC doesn't intervene because COKE is a real operating company. So I think this is not a sign of overreach from the SEC.
[+] [-] unknown|6 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] lmilcin|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] roywiggins|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kds3|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kylec|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hatmatrix|6 years ago|reply