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Legal Fraud vs. Intellectual Fraud: The Growing Challenges Activist Short Sellers Face

Legal Fraud vs. Intellectual Fraud: The Growing Challenges Activist Short Sellers Face

FromReal Vision Daily Briefing: Finance & Investing


Legal Fraud vs. Intellectual Fraud: The Growing Challenges Activist Short Sellers Face

FromReal Vision Daily Briefing: Finance & Investing

ratings:
Length:
47 minutes
Released:
Feb 5, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Carson Block, CIO of Muddy Waters Capital LLC, joins Real Vision managing editor Ed Harrison to discuss the different forms that financial fraud can take in the corporate world, what happened with GameStop last week, and how changing market structure makes activist short selling increasingly more difficult. Block distinguishes between two types of fraud that corporations can commit—legal fraud and intellectual fraud—and explains how insidious and corrosive the latter type is for companies. Harrison and Block then consider why these companies committing intellectual fraud are not being held accountable and how that leads to decaying faith in public institutions. Block also provides his perspective on the short squeeze in GameStop from last week, exploring how initially a smart retail trade morphed into a different sort of animal. He touches on the financial plumbing occurring behind the scenes and whether it truly is efficient or not, and he shares how he sizes positions for shorts, the growing challenges activist short-sellers face, and his experience while investigating American Tower in 2013.
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Released:
Feb 5, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

This is where finance matters. Featuring “The Knock-On Effect,” the show that starts with the financial or economic event you’ve heard about and takes you to a weird place. The financial world is more complex and more fun than you might think, and in this weekly show, Justine Underhill, Alex Rosenberg and Roger Hirst prove it.