Porsche IPO

Porsche has also been gaging interest from billionaires including the founder of energy drink maker Red Bull, Dietrich Mateschitz, as well as LVMH Chairman Bernard Arnault, according to the people.
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This will be a fad.

Now the rich can own one and part of the company.
 
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That Oct 2008 squeeze was amazing.

*Wasn’t involved either side but it definitely made/ended a lot of careers

I think it ended more trading careers than it made. Most of Wall Street was short it and most pensioners were long it.
 
1950-1970's : Simple times. People bought the car and were happy.
1980's : Sales were falling so the gimmicks known as the 928, 944 and 968 were made.
1990's: No one really wanted the gimmicks so Porsche had to hire Toyota to make their production more efficient. In the meantime they created the Boxster.
2000's: Boxster aka not a real Porsche because from the back of the door to the front of the car was a 911 and this pissed off the 911 owners.
Late 2000's: Porsche headed to bankruptcy, bought by VW.
2010's: Sales stagnating late 2010's. Four door is an ugly thing.
2020's: VW spinning it off to let it die.
2030's: D E D
 
That Oct 2008 squeeze was amazing.

It always cracks me up how millennials think that GME was something to make movies about.

The VV infinity squeeze was definitely the god-mother of all squeezes. Ironically, no one talked about it much after it happened. You were either liquidated and committed suicide after, or survived it, and we had a financial crisis still to worry about.

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It always cracks me up how millennials think that GME was something to make movies about.

The VV infinity squeeze was definitely the god-mother of all squeezes. Ironically, no one talked about it much after it happened. You were either liquidated and committed suicide after, or survived it, and we had a financial crisis still to worry about.

View attachment 294499
I remember that lol.

2008:
____________

In the middle of the 2008 financial crisis, Volkswagen AG (OTC: VWAGY) and Porsche were involved in perhaps the most well-known short squeeze of all time. Porsche which already owned 44% of Volkswagen acquired a large number of shares in Volkswagen, an additional 31% stake. In total Porsche owned 75% of Volkswagen, and since the German state of Lower Saxony owned the remaining 20%, there were less than 6% of the float of shares available.

During the same time, hedge funds and short-sellers had borrowed 13% of the shares to short, which meant they could not cover unless Porsche or the Lower Saxony state decided to sell.

As a result, the short-sellers were forced to buy back the shares they had sold, driving the stock price from €210 to over €1,000 a share. Hedge funds are believed to have lost about $30 billion on the Volkswagen AG bet.

The Volkswagen AG short-squeeze scenario shows that even though a company may be declining, a competitor can acquire and ruin a short position's potential for profits.

It's a great example of how two companies can be intertwined and how short-sellers need to be aware of these relationships when placing their bets.
 
I remember that lol.

2008:
____________

In the middle of the 2008 financial crisis, Volkswagen AG (OTC: VWAGY) and Porsche were involved in perhaps the most well-known short squeeze of all time. Porsche which already owned 44% of Volkswagen acquired a large number of shares in Volkswagen, an additional 31% stake. In total Porsche owned 75% of Volkswagen, and since the German state of Lower Saxony owned the remaining 20%, there were less than 6% of the float of shares available.

During the same time, hedge funds and short-sellers had borrowed 13% of the shares to short, which meant they could not cover unless Porsche or the Lower Saxony state decided to sell.

As a result, the short-sellers were forced to buy back the shares they had sold, driving the stock price from €210 to over €1,000 a share. Hedge funds are believed to have lost about $30 billion on the Volkswagen AG bet.

The Volkswagen AG short-squeeze scenario shows that even though a company may be declining, a competitor can acquire and ruin a short position's potential for profits.

It's a great example of how two companies can be intertwined and how short-sellers need to be aware of these relationships when placing their bets.
And I expect those who lost their shirt on that squeeze might be getting ready to take revenge.
 
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