…company executives get nervous. But apart from that, the share price starts to suffer, though, if we believe a new study from researchers at HEC Paris by far not as much as short-sellers say they should. For every analyst, it is part and parcel to give a price target or a target range for a stock. For short-sellers that has only recently become more common. But as more short-sellers like Muddy Waters have started to provide price targets, we can test, how good these short-sellers are at achieving their targets and how share prices react to attacks by short-sellers.
Nice article.
Short-selling is always interesting.
If you’re calling a downward price target an “attack”, I think that shows a significant bias.