To: PapaBear3625
You describe a synthetic sale of equity. A synthetic sale of 2000 PapaBear Inc. equity shares does not result in an additional 2000 equity shares in PapaBear issued and outstanding. It's just a contract the value of which is a function of the price of PapaBear equity which may be settled physically or cash with a notional of 2000 equity shares. Under the contract that you describe, the only problems are (i) the credit risk presented to counterparties if the share price goes up or (ii) the credit risk present to me if the share price goes down. The moral to the story is that settlement may always be made in cash and that the only problem is counterparty credit risk. I thing the flaw in your argument is that you confuse notional with actual. The notional in a derivative is nothing more than a value against which payoffs are determined.
130 posted on
09/27/2008 6:59:41 PM PDT by
Warlord
To: Warlord
What got me confused was, in posts 87, 96, 103 I thought we were talking about a real
naked short, as opposed to a virtual "naked short" which was a byproduct of issuing a derivative.
Could you please go into more detail as to the kind of naked short you are referring to?
155 posted on
09/28/2008 9:18:12 AM PDT by
PapaBear3625
("In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell)
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