色花堂

Home   News   Features   Interviews   Magazine Archive   Symposium   Industry Awards  
Subscribe
Securites Lending Times logo
Leading the Way

Global 色花堂Finance News and Commentary
≔ Menu
Securites Lending Times logo
Leading the Way

Global 色花堂Finance News and Commentary
News by section
Subscribe
⨂ Close
  1. Home
  2. Industry news
  3. Beyond Meat retains title of most-expensive short
Industry news

Beyond Meat retains title of most-expensive short


16 October 2019 New York
Reporter: Maddie Saghir

Generic business image for news article
Image: Shutterstock
Beyond Meat continues to lap the field as the most expensive actively shorted stock in the US market with a stock borrow fee of 161 percent, and intraday rates going even higher, according to S3 Partners data.

Shares in Beyond Meat, a Los Angeles-based producer of plant-based meat substitute products are paying just under $3.6 million per day in stock borrow financing fees, the largest daily financing payment for actively traded shorts, explained S3 Partners managing director, Ihor Dusaniwsky.

Other than Beyond Meat, Zoom Video Communications is the only other stock with more than $1 million in daily stock borrowing costs, S3 data shows.

According to Dusaniwsky, Beyond Meat is so expensive to short because most of the available share to lend are already out on loan.

鈥淟ooking at short interest percent of float versus Beyond Meat鈥檚 offer rate over time we can see that there is a direct correlation between availability and borrow fees," Dusaniwsky said.

鈥淥ne anomaly is that the decrease in short interest percent float in mid-September didn鈥檛 correlate with a decrease in stock borrow fee, which can be explained by the constant demand for shares over that period even as stock borrow returns were coming in, which allowed lenders to keep rates high.鈥

The combination of high borrow rates and short interest over $750 million since mid-June has meant that lenders have been able to earn outsized returns in the stock, Dusaniwsky noted.

The latest S3 data shows that shorts paid $3.58 million in financing costs on the 13 October, bringing year-to-date borrow costs up to $405 million.

Dusaniwsky warned short sellers to take into consideration the underlying stock borrow as well as the short interest as a percent of float when making short investment decisions.

鈥淗igh daily financing costs hit a short seller鈥檚 bottom line directly if a stock鈥檚 price plateaus the trader will be seeing red financing numbers that are not being offset by daily mark-to-market profits," he explained. "If these financing costs are not accounted for properly on a daily basis, what may look like a profitable trade may in actuality be a loser.鈥

Earlier this month, IHS Markit鈥檚 Sam Pierson also highlighted Beyond Meat as the which, along with several other red-hot specials had gone a long way propping over securities lending revenue this year.

For more information on how Beyond Meat became the darling of the securities lending market this year, check out the
NO FEE, NO RISK
100% ON RETURNS If you invest in only one securities finance news source this year, make sure it is your free subscription to 色花堂Finance Times
Advertisement
Subscribe today
Knowledge base

Explore our extensive directory to find all the essential contacts you need

Visit our directory →
Glossary terms in this article
→ Float
→ Mark-to-Market
→ Specials
→ Volatility

Discover definitions, explanations and related news articles in our glossary

Visit our glossary →