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Aye, sell that mfer before tomorrow afternoon imo.

Yea it might still go up, but if yall doubled yall money, yall good. I wouldnt risk my gains on a friday going into a long weekend.
 
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What does that mean exactly and how might it affect the price?
Hedge funds are supposedly using synthetic shares (fake shares ) that they will have to cover ,when AMC does the official count, the public would know that these hedge funds were using fake shares and want us retail investors to sell our shares on Friday to cover their shorts.

Basically all we have to do is hold ,hedge fund companies need us to sell to cover their losses .
 
Hedge funds are supposedly using synthetic shares (fake shares ) that they will have to cover ,when AMC does the official count, the public would know that these hedge funds were using fake shares and want us retail investors to sell our shares on Friday to cover their shorts.

Basically all we have to do is hold ,hedge fund companies need us to sell to cover their losses .

Preciate the info bruh!

That's some wild shit.. lol synthetic shares. These folks just be doin any damn thing
 
will have to cover ,when AMC does the official count, the public would know that these hedge funds were using fake shares and want us retail investors to sell our shares on Friday to cover their shorts.

Basically all we have to do is hold ,hedge fund companies need us to sell to cover their losses .

This is the same shit they are doing with gamestop but at a much larger scale that's why its at 260 now.. both AMC and GME were at 5 dollars last year and everyone found out they were getting shorted that's why both stocks mirror each others movements so similarly in Jan and in May. I didn't expect AMC to beat its all time high in Jan by that much that's why I thought 26 initially, but both stocks have shot up by huge amounts at the same time because of the fuckery
 
This is a good read I put the topic of discussion below


Improper Use Of Dark Pools

Dark pools are a relatively new concept for me. In fact, I didn’t even know they existed until one of my readers sent me information on them and how they’re being used to manipulate the price of AMC stock.

Not surprisingly, further research showed that the reader was correct.

Dark pools were created as a way for institutional investors to sell blocks of shares without these shares causing changes to the stock price. Think about it this way…

An institution wants to sell 200,000 shares of stock in the open market. That’s not all going to sell at once, and with each block of sold shares, the price will fall. So, these institutions use dark pools to hide the fact that they’re selling shares, allowing them to get more money.

That, alone, is already pretty shady, but today’s hedge funds are using dark pools in ways that they were never intended to be used.

Instead of running sales through dark pools, they’re running buys through them. Think of it this way, hedge funds that want the price of AMC stock to fall take out massive short positions and sell them into the open market without the use of dark pools. Then, when retailers buy stock, dark pools are being used to hide those buys, thus the demand is not being properly included in the supply/demand equation, making it look like selling pressure is more than what it is and buying pressure is less than what it is, ultimately manipulating the price downward.



Synthetic Share Creation

Hedge funds also seem to be using sneaky ways to create synthetic shares of AMC that are then dumped on the open market. Why would a hedge fund want to create synthetic shares? To tilt the scales of supply and demand of course.

One of the ways they seem to be doing this is by shorting stock that simply doesn’t exist in a process called naked shorting, which was outlawed in 2008 as it helped to lead to a global financial crisis. I’m guessing that hedge funds didn’t get the memo or simply don’t care.
 
This is a good read I put the topic of discussion below


Improper Use Of Dark Pools

Dark pools are a relatively new concept for me. In fact, I didn’t even know they existed until one of my readers sent me information on them and how they’re being used to manipulate the price of AMC stock.

Not surprisingly, further research showed that the reader was correct.

Dark pools were created as a way for institutional investors to sell blocks of shares without these shares causing changes to the stock price. Think about it this way…

An institution wants to sell 200,000 shares of stock in the open market. That’s not all going to sell at once, and with each block of sold shares, the price will fall. So, these institutions use dark pools to hide the fact that they’re selling shares, allowing them to get more money.

That, alone, is already pretty shady, but today’s hedge funds are using dark pools in ways that they were never intended to be used.

Instead of running sales through dark pools, they’re running buys through them. Think of it this way, hedge funds that want the price of AMC stock to fall take out massive short positions and sell them into the open market without the use of dark pools. Then, when retailers buy stock, dark pools are being used to hide those buys, thus the demand is not being properly included in the supply/demand equation, making it look like selling pressure is more than what it is and buying pressure is less than what it is, ultimately manipulating the price downward.



Synthetic Share Creation

Hedge funds also seem to be using sneaky ways to create synthetic shares of AMC that are then dumped on the open market. Why would a hedge fund want to create synthetic shares? To tilt the scales of supply and demand of course.

One of the ways they seem to be doing this is by shorting stock that simply doesn’t exist in a process called naked shorting, which was outlawed in 2008 as it helped to lead to a global financial crisis. I’m guessing that hedge funds didn’t get the memo or simply don’t care.

sneaky bastards
 
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