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While they have 27 million shares short, you may want to look at Levine's take today on that - not all the shares are actually available due to hedging exposure. The 27MM is on top of the 33MM, not out of them. Levine:
"Here’s a pretty good statistic about Lyft Inc.: Short interest in the No. 2 ride-hailing company has risen to 27 million shares, according to financial analytics firm S3 Partners, while Lyft’s public float is about 33 million shares in total. Lyft has 285.9 million shares of stock outstanding (including regular Class A and high-vote Class B stock), but a big chunk of those are held by insiders and early investors who have agreed not to sell them for six months. Lyft only sold 32.5 million shares when it went public at the end of March. But now there are, apparently, some 60 million shares publicly available: 32.5 million from Lyft, and 27 million from short sellers. Short sellers have basically doubled the supply of Lyft stock. If you own a share of Lyft, there’s about even odds that you bought it from (someone who bought it from (etc.)) the company as part of its fundraising efforts, or from a short seller as part of her bet against Lyft. Or, not necessarily her bet against Lyft. One thing that seems to be happening with Lyft is that some number of its pre-IPO shareholders have somehow managed to hedge their exposure, despite the lockups. The banks that are helping them hedge have shorted the stock. This means that some of the shares that are now publicly available are sort of phantom emanations of shares that aren’t yet publicly available; they are locked-up shares that have nonetheless been sold short. They are not new shares created by short selling, but shares that will be available in the future and that have been moved forward in time by short selling. People always believe that there is some natural limit on the number of short sales, by the way, but there really isn’t. If there are 32.5 million free-floating shares of Lyft, then some enterprising short seller can borrow all of them and sell them to other people. But now those other people own 32.5 million shares of Lyft, and they can further lend them to another (or the same) short seller, who can sell them to yet other people, who will now own shares and be able to lend them, etc. This tends to peter out—some holders won’t lend the stock—but there is no physical requirement that it will. If enough people really wanted to short Lyft stock, and enough people really wanted to buy it, and also enough people wanted to lend it, then there could be 270 million short shares instead of 27 million. The stock market is not just a mechanism for financing companies and allocating their ownership; it is also a mechanism for betting on them. The financing and ownership things are limited by the actual size of the company, but the bets are not; they are limited only by the demand for betting."[0] [0]https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-05-10/the-un... |
This is wrong. Not sure where you came up with this. I think you are confused because Matt talks about the shorts creating more shares..
There aren't really 60M shares, read the last paragraph you quoted to figure out why.