But how is that different from what e.g. Citron Research has done for a couple decades? I think he will be ok. After all he made a detailed investment case more than a year before and made a monthly update tracking his position. That is perfectly fine.I'm going to go out on a limb and predict that he will probably be sued for market manipulation because he was likely front running. If he took positions in advance of touting the stock to a large group of people, then he better buckle up and get a good attorney. Stock advisory services via chat rooms, newsletters, etc. have been getting prosecuted for that type of behavior by the regulators for as long as I can remember.
I'm going to go out on a limb and predict that he will probably be sued for market manipulation because he was likely front running. If he took positions in advance of touting the stock to a large group of people, then he better buckle up and get a good attorney. Stock advisory services via chat rooms, newsletters, etc. have been getting prosecuted for that type of behavior by the regulators for as long as I can remember.
there is an SEC exception for publishing investment advice, with the right disclosure. If SA didn't put in place those disclosure, they could be sued, and so would the authors.Interesting point, but to me his actions look quite similar to everyone posting articles on Seeking Alpha. I haven’t researched whether any of those people posting on Seeking Alpha been sued, but I’d suspect it’s rare, if it ever happened. And plenty of them openly battle short sellers, just without as much luck.

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If he would have just taken the position privately and not constantly promoted it, there would be no problem. It's market manipulation because it involves exposing other people to the position through the channel and then persuading them why it's a good investment...
The difference is that the CNBC talking heads you are referring to are discussing all sorts of stocks and in very brief spurts.
he might be losing his CFA chartholder designation with that shit, he violated quite a few chapters of the CFA code of conduct with those YT videosAnd there's something else that caught my eye in some article somewhere about him...He is currently registered as a CFA? Doesn't that make him a professional trader, subject to all those rules thereof?
Even by just posting his current positions, could that be construed as "giving investment advice"?

he might be losing his CFA chartholder designation with that shit, he violated quite a few chapters of the CFA code of conduct with those YT videos![]()