Monday, November 12, 2007

Has the cap come off?

In the early part of this decade, when REFR roared as high as $40 a share and hung around in the $15-$30 zone for quite a long time before the end of the SPD Inc. era flushed the stock, a rather hefty amount of focus was placed on the size of the short interest. Even though the total shares outstanding were well over 10 million even in 2000, the short interest seemed to hit a hard cap right around 2 million shares. A lot of comments about how "the shorts were out of ammo" could be read, and predictions of a massive short squeeze were made almost daily.

Actually, in that last bit, little has changed since that time, but one relatively new development is that short interest has broken through the barrier that had been just over 2 million shares, and has reached 2.5 million and is still climbing.

So how is that happening? Well, for lack of a better theory, the diagnosis of "what's changed" points a finger at the listing of options on REFR a few months back. The basic idea seems to be that, by purchasing put options, you buy the right to sell REFR at a given price and time, and this right seems to circumvent the borrowing restrictions that kick in whenever the availability of shares to short runs low. Thus, short interest is allowed to increase more freely, with brokers now having to extract borrows after the fact rather than preventing the trades up front.

Now, for all I know that could be all hooey, but it's really the only working theory either side of the debate seems to have come up with. All we know for sure is that the short interest is reaching records highs, and in the meantime the stock, ever since the Hino show announcement, has been in free fall, and those two items are probably not 100% coincidence.

In other news, REFR, which for the past few years has been filing quarterly reports 40 days after the end, did not do so this quarter. This might be because the status of accelerated filer no longer applies to it for whatever reason. Assuming that is so, the filing will most likely come on Wednesday instead. Because goodness knows, REFR is such a complex organization that those extra five days are vital to putting out a proper report on the company's finances.

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