Submissive short sellers everywhere have a very bad time in Korea

The Kospi index fell for a third day, according to Korean virus cases in 2000

Photographer: SeongJoon Cho / Bloomberg

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Retail investors pushed to see stocks rise have come to life miserable for short sellers around the world.

In South Korea, the government is also accumulating.

Lawmakers overseeing the country’s $ 2 trillion stock market are debating plans to extend one of the world’s longest-selling bans on short-term selling amid pressure from mom and popular bettors pushing more than two-thirds of daily trade.

Calls are increasing to make the ten-month ban permanent. More than 202,000 people have signed a petition urging President Moon Jae-in to make short sales illegal, crossing a 200,000 threshold that forces him to give an official response. Moon’s prime minister has already done so he called the practice “undesirable.”

While much of the financial world has been seeing all the changes in the struggle between retail investors and short sellers GameStop Corp., South Korea, has quietly become a major battleground in the debate over and over again about the role of bearish trades in stock markets.

Retail Frenzy

With the increasing daily trading of the pandemic, individual investors have outperformed institutions and foreigners in the Korean stock market

Source: According to Koscom Corp., which provides financial data for the Korea Exchange


With national elections scheduled for early next year, Seoul’s political leaders are resisting angering thousands of Koreans who have fallen in love with trade actions during the pandemic. The head of a Korean retail investor advocacy group has called the short-term sale “bad” and has organized a protesting the practice outside government buildings. Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund has urged South Korea to end its ban on short-term selling, saying it runs the risk of making the market less efficient and harder to hedge.

“Given that financial conditions in Korea and the functioning of the market after the Covid outbreak have stabilized, we believe that the necessary conditions exist to restore this short-term selling practice,” said Andreas Bauer, a fund official. virtual press conference on the Korean economy on Thursday.

Like other countries, South Korea saw its stock market crash in March intensify the pandemic. Stock prices fell three days after the entry into force of the short sale ban, helped by a flood of central bank liquidity and retail buying. The country’s Kospi benchmark ended 2020 with a 31% increase, the world’s best performance after Nigeria’s own resource meter. Kospi has risen another 6.8% so far this year.

Although other markets, including France and Italy, also instituted short-term sales bans at the same time, South Korea is now the only country other than Indonesia that has maintained the restriction.

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