Proof is in the pudding when it comes to lending out stock ; City Trader

WHEN everyone else was bracing themselves for turkey and plum pudding last month, City fund managers were busy borrowing stock they did not own in the hope of pocketing a profit.

That is the message from December figures released by stock market settlement firm CrestCo, showing institutional investors lent 20.3% of shares in supermarkets group Wm Morrison, 23.4% of pubs operator Mitchells Butlers and 20.2% of Man Group.

Heavy stock lending often reflects short-selling by hedge funds hoping to profit from a share-price fall.

Stephen Grainger, product manager at CrestCo, says heavy stock lending can also be connected to the “voting season”as institutions borrow stock from other funds ahead of a company’s annual meeting to increase their voting power on a contentious resolution.

One expert says: “If you have allowed for any special factors and still see the percentage of lending increasing on a stock, you can conclude some large investors are taking a negative view.”

But the hedge funds might get it wrong, in which case a rising share price would squeeze their short positions, forcing them to buy shares to reduce their exposure, driving up the price even faster Angus McCrone has a spread-bet website at: www.onewaybet.com

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