Setting a Sell order at £1+ = Takes back your shares being Shorted, Dosent mean you have to sell you31 Jan 2021 21:50
Setting a Sell order at £1+ = Takes back your shares being Shorted, Dosent mean you have to sell youToday 21:23
By doing this the Broker takes back your shares, that the Shorter has sneakily loaned, without consulting you about this, and saying in a nice way, my client wants to sell his shares, the shorter will try to close their position as fast as they can, 40/50p creating a short squeeze, the more the SP increases the more they panic to close their position. A sell order can be placed at whatever price you would be happy with, be it £1 £5 or £10.
When the price rises, you incresse your sell order to reflect the buying by the Shorters, not actually selling any shares in the process, but BURNING the SHORTER in the process.
Their time is up, Monday will see a gap up, just like when they shorted it from £2 to 8p, was that fair price for this company?
The Scum Bag Shorters weren’t moaning then, bringing a once FTSE100 company to its knees.
My 100,000 shares are set at £1, I’ll move them up, WHEN they get near this level.
They can have mine when I get a real valuation for our Company.
BUY If you have funds, Hold, but make use of you’re shares to drive the SP up to where it was before the SCUM got hold of it.
I think I have a problem I want to participate in this action as my bank (DeutscheBank) only allows me to place a sell limit order of 20% higher - what can i do more?gla