Short Sellers Upended a Small Farm Real-Estate Company. This Is What It Looked Like.

  • 📰 WSJ
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 34 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 17%
  • Publisher: 63%

Россия Новости Новости

Россия Последние новости,Россия Последние новости

Shares for a small real-estate investment trust called Farmland Partners dropped 39% one day in 2018. Prosecutors and regulators have been examining what happened.

Farmland Partners’ shares plummeted after a report said the company was in trouble; prosecutors and regulators have been examining what happened

Andy Jenks, a sixth-generation farmer in Illinois, grows corn on the land he rents from Farmland Partners.Andy Jenks, a sixth-generation Illinois farmer, owns shares in a small real-estate investment trust called Farmland Partners Inc. but rarely thought about them. That changed on July 11, 2018. That morning, a writer going by the name Rota Fortunae published an article on an investing website, Seeking Alpha, alleging Farmland was at risk of insolvency. Some investors had shorted the company, betting Farmland’s stock was poised to decline. It did, and by the end of the day, Farmland was down 39%. It took more than two years for the share price to recover.

 

Спасибо за ваш комментарий. Ваш комментарий будет опубликован после проверки

Why are you promoting and sending push notifications on this story? 99% of co’s that bitch about shorts are fra*ds/liars… so you make a big to do about sub $1B market cap company. Rota was right on other cos and dealt with this…

The names Warren Buffet and Bill Gates come to mind.

Simply everyday gambling on the stock market. The whole thing is a giant casino based on what people think something is worth.

Sounds like business as usual for the crooks

Мы обобщили эту новость, чтобы вы могли ее быстро прочитать.Если новость вам интересна, вы можете прочитать полный текст здесь Прочитайте больше:

 /  🏆 98. in RU

Россия Последние новости, Россия Последние новости