I'm doing a DD recap on $RDBX to update everyone on the play and give everybody _full_ transparency into the 8-K filing and understand what is going on. Buckle up, this is gonna be a long one...
$RDBX (Redbox Entertainment) is currently the largest overleveraged stock on the market according to Ortex data. I've been carefully watching for **any** signs of shorts covering in the last 5 trading days. There have been absolutely none.
In fact, they shorted some more...
$RDBX has been shorted by 53% of its FF which has only increased in the last two trading days. Accounting for 2-day settlement, if shorts covering had caused the run-up, then the T+2 delayed data would show a dramatic drop in the number of shares on loan as of this morning.
Instead, shares on loan have gone from 93% of FF to 108%... completely bonkers.
Shorts absolutely didn't cover, and market makers (MM) started borrowing to keep up with the buy orders. There are NO options for $RDBX, and as a result, MMs are forced to provide a liquid market.
Let us further note that the Cost-to-borrow average is more than 471% of the cost-basis.
Imagine if you took out a 471% interest credit card and had to pay 4x your principal balance per year, and you had to make a payment _every single day_ against that balance.
If shorts took out a $1,000 position, they'd have to pay ~$13/day just to hold the position.
After just 90 days, shorts would have already had to pay $1,175, just for the privilege to hold/short this stock.
Amp that number up 3M shares on loan, and shorts are paying ~$290k/day.
Let's look at another factor. $RDBX lendable shares have been 100% utilized since Mar 22, and on threshold ever since Apr 28.
After today that's 5 days.
If shorts don't deliver their outstanding FTDs by T+13 (May 16), the SEC can force them to close their positions.
But for market makers, the issue is far more serious because MMs are only permitted to FTD for 6 days before the SEC starts putting pressure on them.
Per REGSHO, MMs will be forced to cover their short exempts with either a borrow or a purchased share by T+6 from their purchase
So for us, this is great, because market makers are continuously backing themselves into a corner, thinking they'll be able to rug-pull retail and cover those short-exempts for 20-30% cheaper than when they created them.
if $RDBX goes up, however, the opposite occurs.
If price goes up past $11 & MMs say,
"Oh shit, we have 1.33M shares of $RDBX that will FTD before Fri, and they'll be due by Tues morning May 10... and we borrowed 108% of the free float because we never located our short exempt borrows... what the fuck are we gonna do?!~"
Mean while retail keeps buying shares, and the MMs on Wall Street and in downtown Chicago see this shit in the distance...
I rarely talk like this because I try very hard to stay impartial and unbiased in my assessment, and I *AM* biased here. After all, I own a whole... 300 shares 🤣
It's not the numbers of one individual that matter, it's the numbers that a wave of individuals can consume.
I'm not in the business of pump and dumps, and I work very hard to make sure to keep my DD and my decisions transparent, honest, and ethical, but what I see here is seriously one of the best squeeze setups I've seen since $SPRT went from $8.10 to $57 in a span of a month...
Before we get too ahead of ourselves, I must let everyone know about the potential for dilution which can happen very soon, but luckily it's not as bad as it seems. Still, I want to make sure everyone knows EXACTLY what the risks are and what can happen.
Currently there are warrants for $RDBX which are eligible for a cashless exercise starting on May 10th. This is per $RDBX's latest 8-k filing. The warrants can dilute $RDBX by up to 20% of its outstanding shares, maximum. That's 1.26M shares, approximately.
Proof in the pics.
So... short sellers are betting on a 20% dilution to bail their asses out of the fire... after suffering a cool $7M in net losses on Apr 29 and May 2 back to back...
That being said, the importance of this information isn't so much that "dilution is bad" as much as misinformation about dilution is bad.
In order to fight the misinformation, I'm getting ahead of it and making everyone aware that, beginning May 10th, 20% dilution is possible.
$RDBX technicals are set up for consolidation and continuation once we break out of the $8 level. $RDBX held $6.40 twice now, despite shorts piling on.
The effect is that shorts have left their asses swinging in the breeze with a nice, brightly colored bullseye on them. 🎯
The OBV shows consolidation after massive bullish divergence, and the MACD cross down appears shallow. After some time passes with shorts biting their nails and hemorrhaging borrow fees, I anticipate another cross above and a breakout from $8-$9. Final resistance is at $10.50
Shorts have earned their scorch marks on this one. Don't feel bad for them. Whoever found a way to borrow 108% of the free float in order to try to short this company to death is no friend to free and fair markets.
They deserve to burn.
As always, none of this is financial advice, and I am not a financial advisor nor a fortune teller, but I am long on $RDBX with no intention to sell.
I wish everyone the best of luck as we chase this next squeeze.
$BBBY might actually be a very real, very powerful squeeze opportunity of a combined gamma and short squeeze. This thread will unpack the opportunity and analyze the charts, ortex data, and options interest in Bed Bath and Beyond.
This is an opportunity, despite the bankruptcy
As always, none of this is financial advice. There is absolutely no way of knowing, predicting, or accurately forecasting market volatility with any degree of certainty.
Please make sure to perform your own research to understand the risks, and exercise proper risk management.
If you want the video version of this, here is the DD I put out recently that discusses this opportunity; however, it does not include the Ortex data. For that, please read on.
I think it's extremely hard for Finra to justify its actions, but we need to acknowledge this has happened before with no consequences...
- $SPRT war flashbacks -
The problem is, class actions and lawsuits take many years... $MMTLP investors have a very big fucking problem NOW.
The situation with this forced sale of $MMTLP and extraordinary halt by FINRA is going to force everyone's shares into settlement, which will force them to transfer to a private company.
You can't sell them.
However, this is a taxable action, so... this is gonna suck but...
For those who are unaware, Congress and the White House are terrified of a rail union strike because it would cripple the US economy and cause transportation/logistics to break down.
Despite that, Union Pacific refused to grant additional paid time off for workers.
In response, The White House has made it illegal for rail workers to strike in the face of what it calls a national emergency.
The Union Pacific Railroad has the money & resources to grant these benefits but refuses to do so out of greed, not necessity. time.com/6238361/joe-bi…
I'm going to clear up something regarding $AMC's share dividend and the fears about a "dilution" through an equity merger.
This will be a bit lengthy.
While you might argue that it is "dilution", what you fail to realize is that @CEOAdam is giving you all a gift of free equity.
If a merger between the preferred shares happens, it will because apes voted on it.
Here are the pros and cons we should consider...
First, $APE is a new equity which is separate from $AMC, tied together only by the value of the company.
They are priced separately.
By itself, $APE has no bearing on $AMC's value, but it *does* offer a separate dilution option for the company that has nothing to do with synthetic shares in $AMC.
It literally has no effect currently.
But if AA can sell those shares, the company can use that cash.
Just a reminder of this thread where I highlighted the last time $BBIG barcoded like crazy before it hit a liquidity pool about 10% below it's average price on the week and then took off for the stars within 30 days.
$BBIG has more than 250,000 call options hidden in the options chain with the potential to expire ITM and put unimaginable pain on market makers and the shorts who have beaten $BBIG into the dirt.
For context, 257,640 calls is over 25.7M shares, or 20% of the total Free Float.
Market makers have been anticipating $BBIG would not survive this beat-down, and have been dictating the price on these options as worthless for the past month to convince retail to sell for pennies on the dollar.
In driving the price down so far, they've created an opportunity.