Back to the future: short-selling ban lambasted

Cliff Asness must be a very stressed man. Not only has he been “mad as hell” for nearly three years (or is it mad again?) but also the reprise in responses by regulators around the globe to market crises, namely banning short selling, means he doesn’t have to write any original words in response.

The managing and founding principal of AQR joins an abundance of criticism regarding the ban on short selling in France, Belgium, Italy, and Spain.

Asness’ prophesises his views via his “Stumbling on the Truth” blog, and in response to the recent ban on short selling in Europe, described the ban as “stupider this time than last”.

In September 2008 an opinion piece by Asness, in The NY Times blog, Executive Suite, described the US ban on short selling of financials as a response by “foolish bureaucrats who are making scapegoats out of others and damaging our economy in a misdirected effort to solve a problem the government, to a large extent, caused”.

While not denying the magnitude of the crisis, or that a response was needed, he went on to say that the response “should not be to close down free-market capitalism and punish the wrong people”.

“The government’s actions here will unambiguously hurt our capital markets and economy long-term.”

Sponsored Content

Asness argues the ban is “stupider” this time because studies of the 2008 ban revealed “strong, direct empirical evidence that banning short-selling of European financial institutions during market crises does not make their stock prices go up and has significant bad consequences”.

EDHEC says these decisions fly in the face of empirical evidence, and academic studies have documented the positive contribution of short-sellers to market efficiency and show that constraining short sales significantly reduces market quality, by reducing liquidity and increasing volatility.

The graph below shows the effect a ban on short selling had on Pakistan’s Karachi SE-100 Index.

There is an argument that banning short selling is buying time. And the EDHEC-Risk Institute, headquartered in France, describes short selling bans as a “political smokescreen that is likely to be counterproductive, both directly by disrupting market functioning and degrading market quality at a most testing time”.

It also says there is an indirect effect by “fuelling defiance vis-à-vis sovereign states and the continued inability of their political institutions to address the causes of the current crisis”.

“At the rate the world is going I’m never going to have to write anything new again,” Asness says. The repercussions of which, are not worth investigating.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Core

 

 

For further reading see:

 

Which shorts are informed?

 

Short selling and the price discovery process

 

 

One response to “Back to the future: short-selling ban lambasted”

  1. Max Ryerson

    Really enjoyed this article

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

There’s no escaping the fiduciary duty of creating a better world

ESG, and more recently climate change, are now largely accepted in the investment process, and more importantly have passed the fiduciary duty test.

Six US public funds top the class

A study examining funding policy, benefit design, and economic assumptions of six US public funds, which managed to endure the economic turmoil, shows some consistent features that could be emulated for fund persistence.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Managing liquidity and rebalancing constraints

This extension of previous research by Morgan Stanley’s Martin Leibowitz and Anthony Bova provides an analysis of the relationships between rebalancing liquidity, portfolio flows, and diversification into illiquid assets.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Fiscal disunity mires euro as US$ buoys slightly

Conflicting social, political and economic priorities are fighting for dominance in the Eurozone, and managing director and head of currency management at SSgA, Collin Crownover, believes this is affecting the outlook for the currency, while the US dollar, in a relative sense, looks quite positive. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CII wants SEC to keep up legal fight

The Council of Institutional Investors has called for the Securities and Exchange Commission to pursue a re-hearing of a controversial proxy access rule that would have bolstered shareholder rights but was recently defeated in a legal challenge.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Investors look at private equity despite bumpy ride on public markets

Despite European public equity markets tumbling, private equity is yet to experience the sharp downturn it suffered in the last financial crisis, with investors still showing interest in the strongly performing asset, said independent alternative assets research firm Preqin.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous