Life

Trump Media scrambles to stop short sellers from tanking share prices



Trump Media and Technology Group, the parent company of Truth Social, is scrambling to stop short sellers from tanking its share values.

NBC News reports that Trump Media this week sent around suggestions to shareholders to prevent their shares in the company from winding up in the hands of short sellers who are essentially betting on the company's failure to make money.

According to NBC, the "tips include holding DJT shares in a cash account at a brokerage firm as opposed to a margin account, 'opting out of any securities lending program,' moving Trump Media shares to the company’s designated transfer agent, and transferring shares to a bank and 'holding them in your retirement account.'"

Short sellers essentially pay brokerage firms fees to borrow shares on a temporary basis on the belief that the shares will sink in price.

READ MORE: From 'really rich' to begging: Inside Trump's U-turn on one of his first campaign lies

After borrowing the shares, the short sellers proceed to sell them on the open market and then by them back by a specific date when they have to be returned to their owners.

If the share price in that time has indeed gone down, then the short sellers pocket the difference they made between the original sale and the repurchase.

If the share price increases, however, the short sellers lose money because they'll be buying back the shares at a higher price than the original sale.

Short sellers have swarmed to Trump Media shares for weeks now, as its price has plummeted from a high of $66.22 on March 27th to a low of $22.84 on Tuesday, although its price has recovered some of that lost value in the last day-and-a-half of trading.

The longer-term threat to Trump Media's value likely isn't short sellers, however, but simply a lack of profitability. The selloff in shares started earlier this month when the company released an earnings report showing that it lost $58 million in the last fiscal year while generating just $4 million in revenues.

Review: At Toutant, Southern-focused craft and creative ferment make a can’t-miss Buffalo place

<imgsrc="fl_progressive:steep/https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/bfff2e47-5225-4aff-b732-995e011d74a0_1578x1170.jpeg" width="1456" height="1080" data-attrs='{"src":"https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/bfff2e47-5225-4aff-b732-995e011d74a0_1578x1170.jpeg","srcNoWatermark":null,"fullscreen":null,"imageSize":null,"height":1080,"width":1456,"resizeWidth":null,"bytes":430436,"alt":null,"title":null,"type":"image/jpeg","href":null,"belowTheFold":false,"topImage":true,"internalRedirect":null}' class="sizing-normal" alt="" srcset="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_424,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/bfff2e47-5225-4aff-b732-995e011d74a0_1578x1170.jpeg 424w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_848,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https://substack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/bfff2e47-5225-4aff-b732-995e011d74a0_1578x1170.jpeg...

Michael Dimmer of Marble + Rye to talk work-life balance and gluten-free pizza March 4

My recent review of Michael Dimmer’s restaurant included lots...

Review: At Fortuna’s, finding a Little Italy yet persists in Niagara Falls

These days, when a longstanding restaurant goes dark, reading...

Sunday News: Empanada duo brings tortas to Chandler St., Rin returns to Elmwood

REVIEWFortuna’s is the sort of family-run Italian-American restaurant that...

Join me March 19 for Burmese 101 at Downtown Bazaar

In 2010, in the back of a grocery at...
Buffalo
overcast clouds
52.8 ° F
54.9 °
51 °
80 %
3.8mph
100 %
Thu
53 °
Fri
56 °
Sat
48 °
Sun
47 °
Mon
54 °

Chaos Breaks Out In Georgia’s Parliament After Party Leader Clocked In The Head While Addressing Lawmakers

Chaos broke out in Georgia's parliament after the leader of the ruling party was punched in the head as he addressed lawmakers about a controversial law.

The post Chaos Breaks Out In Georgia’s Parliament After Party Leader Clocked In The Head While Addressing Lawmakers first appeared on Mediaite.

Pro-Trump media landscape ‘utterly collapsing’ compared to last election cycle: report



In the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, a slew of far-right websites popped up and cashed in on content propping up then-candidate Donald Trump. And those sites continued to rake in millions of dollars during Trump's time in the White House. But since 2020, the right-wing media cash spigot has effectively slowed to a trickle.

A new report in the Atlantic found that since the 2020 election cycle, the most prominent pro-Trump websites have seen their once robust traffic dry up. Writer Paul Farhi analyzed data from media analysis website The Righting, which focuses on conservative publishers, and reported that of the 10 most popular right-wing websites, traffic was down by an average of roughly 40%.

"The flow of traffic to Donald Trump’s most loyal digital-media boosters isn’t just slowing, as in the rest of the industry; it’s utterly collapsing," Farhi wrote. "Some of the bigger names in the field have been pummeled the hardest: The Daily Caller lost 57 percent of its audience; Drudge Report, the granddaddy of conservative aggregation, was down 81 percent; and The Federalist, founded just over a decade ago, lost a staggering 91 percent."

ALSO READ: A neuroscientist explains how Trump is using existential fear to win the election

"FoxNews.com, by far the most popular conservative-news site, has fared better, losing 'only' 22 percent of traffic, which translates to 23 million fewer monthly site visitors compared with four years ago," he added.

According to Farhi's research, the primary reason for the precipitous drop in clicks for far-right websites is ultimately due to Facebook. Conservative publishers were for years dependent on Facebook engagement as a primary source of traffic. The social media platform's algorithm (the complex code that determines what content shows up in a user's feed) had predominantly favored outrage, as content that provokes a negative reaction is more likely to get a user to click, like, comment or share a post.

In 2020, Vox reported that the Facebook algorithm was overwhelmingly favorable to conservatives, with far-right pundits like Ben Shapiro and Dan Bongino bringing in tens of millions of clicks per month from Facebook engagement. Progressive media analysis group Media Matter for America found that anti-transgender content in particular generated a disproportionate amount of clicks for conservative websites. New York Times columnist Kevin Roose found that "conservative pages were beating out liberals’ [pages] in making it into the day’s top 10 Facebook posts with links in the United States, based on engagement, like the number of reactions, comments, and shares the posts receive."

Amid a wave of criticism from Congress and international bodies over Facebook being exploited by bad actors to influence elections, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced changes to the algorithm in 2018 aimed at promoting content from friends and family over news publishers. He further tweaked it in 2021 to further deprioritize content from publishers, which has, over time, resulted in far fewer clicks for the conservative publishers that used to dominate the platform.

"All of this monkeying with the internet’s plumbing drastically reduced the referral traffic flowing to news and commentary sites," Farhi wrote. "The changes have affected everyone involved in digital media, including some liberal-leaning sites—such as Slate (which saw a 42 percent traffic drop), the Daily Beast (41 percent), and Vox (62 percent, after losing its two most prominent writers)—but the impact appears to have been the worst, on average, for conservative media."

According to Farhi, conservatives are now retreating from websites depending on clicks to other forms of media entirely, like podcasts, Substack newsletters, YouTube channels and videos on the far-right broadcasting platform Rumble.

"There’s a lot of choice," said The Righting owner Howard Polskin. "Even if [the big] sites went out of business tomorrow, there are a lot of voices still out there."

Click here to read Farhi's Atlantic article in full.

GOP House leaders discussing changing rules on removing speaker

(NewsNation) — Republican leaders in the House are having...

The Sheer Absurdity At The Heart Of Trump’s Historic First Criminal Trial

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the...

How Donald Trump could ride to Mike Johnson’s rescue

The embattled House speaker is headed to Mar-a-Lago for a badly needed political lifeline.