1 | | Yet Another Short Selling Failure By Rudi Filapek-Vandyck, Editor FNArena
Short sellers. They present themselves as the shining white knights if not the morally-driven, diligent sleuths who dig into the finer details of how companies operate and communicate with their investors, with the sole aim of uncovering fraud and management misdemeanors, because investors are best served by honesty and transparency, and somebody needs to do the dirty work when others are simply looking to promote the next pump & dump opportunity.
Great theory. And there have been a few excellent examples, both domestic and overseas, of short sellers uncovering the fraud when nobody else did. Blue Sky Alternative Investments springs to mind, as does failed sandalwood grower and marketer Quintis.
But a much larger number of companies have been targeted mostly via overseas domiciled researchers keen to inform their hedge fund clientele first and then releasing their accusatory research upon the masses. Helped by the fact this is usually a well-prepared, organised gang-attack, the initial result tends to be a sharp fall in the target's share price.
From Macquarie Group and Fortescue Metals a little further down memory lane, to Amcor, Credit Corp, Corporate Travel, Rural Funds Group, Seek, TechnologyOne, Tyro Payments, and WiseTech Global in more recent times; all have been subjected to such an attack from foreign short sellers research, but with quite the mixed outcomes.
Among the recent attacks, shares in Tyro Payments have yet to recover, while TechnologyOne is well off its low but also still at a distance from the top, and Seek shares are setting new all-time highs, having dipped only briefly back in late October-early November.
First observation: while in some cases legitimate questions have been raised, most share prices recover over time and shake off the bad smell that automatically comes with the short sellers accusations, amid broad media coverage and a falling share price. There are always multiple factors in play, in particular over a longer time-frame, but one is hard pressed to find any lingering impact in today's share price of, say, Rural Funds Group, or Credit Corp, or Amcor.
Equally important: while not every accusation and attack is swiftly dealt with or decisively debunked, through the courts or otherwise, none of these targeted companies have since been uncovered as being fraudulent in their operations, accountancy, or otherwise.
I also note that, with the exception of Tyro Payments for which the market is undoubtedly awaiting the next update on technology failure and remediation put in place, the negative impact on share prices is becoming shallower and shorter. At the same time, those familiar with the companies involved are increasingly labeling the research released to inspire such attacks as "low quality", "nothing new" and "factually incorrect".
Last year, those were the key words used in response to GMT research, not necessarily by the company under attack (TechnologyOne), but by domestic analysts familiar with the company and the sector. Same words re-appeared when local media were seeking qualified responses to Blue Orca's attack on Seek.
Last week, J Capital launched an attack on small cap local technology company, Nearmap ((NEA)), and despite JCap's marketing efforts beforehand to gather as much anticipation and impact as possible, it has proved quite the disappointing exercise, mostly for the short sellers who jumped on the bandwagon while -no doubt- expecting another easy clobber-them-handsomely knee-jerk group exercise before anyone starts asking questions.
Nearmap is a not well known, former high flyer, that is not profitable, had a few operational hiccups in years past, and with lots of question marks surrounding its expansion into the US market. At first glance, that seems like a rather easy bounty to target, similar as with Credit Corp, Rural Funds Group and TechnologyOne in the past.
Only this time, things have gone pear shaped quite quickly. Also because of how the company under attack has responded to the many short sellers allegations. Once the share price started weakening, and the company became aware of JCap's report, it simply asked the ASX to halt trading in its shares, which was granted.
Then it pulled forward (by two days) the release of its interim financials, together with presentation slides, an analyst pack, detailed commentary on the financials, plus a dedicated rebuttal of the accusations made in the short sellers report.
We can all argue about this and that until the cows come home, and without finding any concrete answers, but I think Monday's share price response tells the tale: JCap's attack has been found wanting, and short sellers have, at least in part, abandoned their strategy and covered in order to minimise potential losses. In case you are not aware, Nearmap shares surged just under 19% on the day to .57, their highest level since November last year.
And as I have been fortunate to read through some of the early responses from some analysts whose daily job it is to monitor and research this little company, the released performance numbers did not reveal a "blow-me-out-of-the-park" performance from the company. They were simply good enough to show investors that JCap's case was built on quicksand. Faulty research. Misguided accusations. Call it what you want.
So here's the irony. In a share market that is deemed extremely well-priced, if not grossly overvalued, by many a market observer, the industry whose raison d'etre consists of uncovering fraud and investor deception is increasingly being unmasked as publishers of low-quality, faulty research aimed at uninformed, flighty investors who'd be willing to sell first and ask questions later.
Nearmap was once upon a time part of my selection of local technology companies that deserved investor attention. For a short time it even featured in the All-Weather Model Portfolio. In the current context, I believe the company, given it is unprofitable, with many question marks and execution uncertainties, remains too risky for my appetite.
But on the swift and decisive response to the JCap organised attack, I'd say well done Nearmap. Truly impressive. Let's hope a few nasties got burned really heavily, and they direct their disappointment back at the source of the report.
Serves them well.
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