By LARRY SWEDROE
There is a large body of academic research into the information contained in short-selling activity. These include the 2016 study The Shorting Premium and Asset Pricing Anomalies, the 2017 study Stock Loan Fees, Private Information, and Smart Lending, and the 2020 studies Securities Lending and Trading by Active and Passive Funds and The Loan Fee Anomaly: A Short Seller’s Best Ideas. The research demonstrates that short sellers are informed investors who are skilled at processing information. Those studies found that stocks with high shorting fees earn abnormally low returns even after accounting for the shorting fees earned from securities lending. They also help explain returns to many anomalies. Thus, loan fees provide information in the cross-section of equity returns and help keep markets efficient.
Bige Kahraman contributes to the literature on the role short sellers play in keeping markets efficient with her study Publicizing Arbitrage, published in the May 2021 issue of the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis. The focus of her paper was to determine how greater public disclosure of arbitrage activity and informed trading affect price efficiency. To find the answer she exploited rule amendments in U.S. securities markets, which imposed a higher frequency of public disclosure of short positions.
She began by noting that higher public disclosure can hurt the production of information and deteriorate efficiency — arbitrageurs may lose their informational advantages by having to reveal their positions before they can be fully built up, reducing their incentives. Or higher public disclosure can be beneficial by mitigating the limits to arbitrage and diffusing arbitrageurs’ information faster.
Arbitrageurs can be hesitant to attack a mispricing because of horizon risk, the risk that the mispricing can take too long to correct so that potential profits are eroded due to accumulating transaction costs or the risk that the mispricing worsens in the short run.
Kahraman added: “Public disclosure of short-sales positions can therefore be helpful as it can allow the rest of the investing public to learn from short-sellers more promptly. Moreover, if increased public disclosure of short positions hastens the diffusion of short-sellers’ information, then short-sellers’ horizon risk would be reduced, thereby increasing short-selling activity and improving price efficiency.” She provided an empirical examination of the two views by studying the effects of amendments to rules approved by the SEC (effective September 7, 2007) that increased the frequency of short interest reporting requirements from once a month (on the 15th) to twice a month (on the 15th and at end of month).
U.S. securities exchanges publicise each stock’s total short interest, defined as the total outstanding short positions in a given stock. Prior to the amendments, investors in the U.S. received new information on short interest only after the settlement date on the 15th of each month. In the post-amendment period, investors receive additional new information on short interest after the settlement date at the end of each month.
Kahraman tested the difference in price efficiency between pre- and post-amendment periods, including the “placebo dates,” when short interest would have been publicly reported had broker-dealers been required to report short interest positions at the end-of-month in the pre-amendment period. Her main measure of price efficiency was the cumulative abnormal returns around quarterly firm earnings announcements — the post-earnings announcement drift (PEAD) anomaly, the tendency for a stock’s cumulative abnormal returns to drift in the direction of an earnings surprise for several weeks (even several months) following an earnings announcement. Her data sample was split into two periods: January 2003-September 2007 (the pre-amendment period) andSeptember 2007-December 2012, (post-amendment period). Following is a summary of her findings:
The new disclosure regime has an important impact on a stock’s informational environment.
Information encapsulated within short interest, which contains information about future company news, was more quickly incorporated into prices, thereby increasing price efficiency.
With faster information diffusion, short seller holding periods declined by about 10 days, allowing them to both cash in their positions more quickly and take larger positions.
In the post-amendment period, earnings announcements occurring after the end-of-month short interest announcements were less of a surprise to the market. The lower price reactions were complemented by lower trading activity and lower volatility. In addition, in the post-amendment period there was on average a 7 percent reduction in the pre-earnings announcement bid-ask spread.
Relative price efficiency in the post-amendment period improved on average by a statistically significant 7 percent (mean) and 11 percent (median)—about 30 basis points in absolute terms.
The effects were larger for stocks with negative information and more pronounced for stocks with higher arbitrage risk.
There were significant price reactions on announcement days, especially for stocks with large increases in short interest—highlighting the significance that public disclosure of short interest provides to investors.
The results were robust to various tests.
Kahraman concluded that her findings “provide strong support for the hypothesis that increased public disclosure improves price efficiency”. She added that her findings “are consistent with studies which emphasize the benefits that publicizing arbitrageurs’ positions can provide. … Public disclosures can help arbitrageurs overcome the limits to arbitrage arising from horizon risk, and subsequently, public disclosures can improve price efficiency.” It’s important to note that the twice monthly short interest disclosures are not the only source of information. Institutional investors can get shorting information (such as availability and cost to borrow) from brokers and data providers. This data availability has increased since the increased disclosure requirement became effective. This may also be contributing to market efficiency.
An interesting question is: Now that we have seen how the Robinhood traders can “band together” to exploit the availability of shorting information by engaging in short squeezes — a good short position could be made untenable in the near term by a short squeeze, and thus one can be right in the long term but unable to survive until then — will Kahraman’s findings continue to hold?
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