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2:02 AM
Isn't that the exact definition of a pump-and-dump
 
not quite, part of it is a regulatory requirement that MM keep selling (kinda)
So its a kind of short squeeze, although right now the MMs have basically fulfilled their regulatory requirements, so its not clear how much more money can be squeezed out of them.
 
 
11 hours later…
1:07 PM
Our next A.I. in Robotics meetup is online, details here: meetup.com/Autonomous-Artificial-Intelligence-in-Robotics/…
Join me if you are interested.
 
 
7 hours later…
8:03 PM
 
8:18 PM
@Mikhail That's certainly cool--but doesn't change the fact that in terms of the business as a whole, I'd guess the short traders were basically right--Gamestop's long-term prospects don't strike me as particularly great (just happens that in this case, they overdid trying to guess at the near term based on the longer term).
 
@JerryCoffin Its like 6 billion now
BTW
Right now GME's executives could have dumped their corporated stock reserves for billions, and funneled into growth or something.
 
Not surprising--I wouldn't be surprised if it ends up in the 10 billion+ range. They're all using similar algorithms, so when they make a mistake, they all tend to make similar mistakes together.
@Mikhail I'm not sure what they'd really do to grow that's likely to work well in the long term. For the most part, they have stores in malls, and malls in general aren't doing well. Worse for them, a much larger percentage of games are bought online and downloaded directly to the console, leaving little chance for Gamestop to make any money on the transaction.
 
Yeah so their sales aren't primarily video games.
But honestly, they could funnel all their GME stock into index matched funds :-)
 
If they'd been proactive a long time ago, and built something like Steam for doing online distribution, and convinced at least one console vendor to use that service, they might have been able to do well with that. As it stands now, just about their only long term play seems to be to shift to some other business entirely.
 
8:38 PM
Yeah, but anyways, the conversation is about fucking over short sellers who are meanies
 
I dunno if "meanies" is really the right term. More about greed, as a rule.
 
The short sellers were trying to lower GME stock by actively spending time convincing other people it was garbage.
 
posted on January 25, 2021 by Herb Sutter

This special Guru of the Week series focuses on contracts. We covered basic assertions in GotW #97… but not all asserted conditions are created equal. Given some assertion facility that can be used like this: 1. Give one example each of an asserted condition whose run-time evaluation is: a) super cheap It’s hard to find … Continue reading GotW #98 Solution: Assertion levels (Difficulty:&#

 
9:04 PM
@Mikhail Sure. But still (at least primarily) with the intent to make money.
 
I mean, there are other ways to make money, that don't include spending all your time talking shit about some company that employe's tens of thousands of people. These guy's primary mode of operation is to hurt the image of a company, possibly through media manipulation. Thats not nice at all!
GME is a company with reasonable potential and it seems their real issue (as Cramer, etc) noted was that the most profitable items have been in short supply, like PS5s
 
9:21 PM
@Mikhail Gamestop themselves are hardly what I'd call "nice". They sell a game for $40. When a kid has played it through, Gamestop gives them only $5 trade-in on it, but then turns around and sells it used for $30-35.
 
I mean, Goodwill gives you nothing, and those guys have "good" in the name, so they must be "good" :-)
 
@Mikhail I used to work with a guy named Will. He gave me a few things, but I'm not sure giving me a cold qualifies him as particularly "good".
 
you messed that joke up
 
@Mikhail Probably more importantly, he quit without notice, leaving me to finish a project on my own, and he kept the copy of the Dragon Book he'd borrowed from me.
 
Tome of Compiler Magik
 

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