Marketdash

SEC Hands Short Sellers Another Two-Year Delay on Disclosure Rules

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
The SEC just pushed back Form SHO disclosure requirements until 2028, marking the second major delay for rules meant to shed light on massive short positions held by hedge funds.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has once again given Wall Street's short-selling elite exactly what they wanted: more time. For the second time in two years, the agency tasked with protecting everyday investors has granted a two-year extension on Form SHO, pushing the implementation date all the way to January 2, 2028.

Form SHO was supposed to be one of those sensible post-2008 reforms. Part of the Dodd-Frank package, it's designed to pull secretive short-selling hedge funds into at least partial daylight. The concept is straightforward: require the biggest players to confidentially disclose their massive short positions to the SEC, which would then publish the information as aggregated, delayed data.

This matters because the data could give retail investors critical tools to identify potential stock manipulation, spot concentrated short attacks and understand which stocks are being heavily targeted. Right now, that information exists mostly in rumors and speculation.

The GameStop Lesson

Remember Melvin Capital and GameStop Corp. (GME)? Back in 2021, Melvin Capital, run by Gabe Plotkin, held a huge short position against the struggling video game retailer. Retail investors on social media figured out that GameStop was shorted more than 100% of its available shares and coordinated a massive buying campaign.

The resulting short squeeze sent the stock from around $20 to nearly $500. Melvin Capital lost billions and eventually closed its doors entirely.

Form SHO would require hedge funds to disclose positions like that. Even though the data would be aggregated rather than showing individual positions, it would still represent a meaningful step toward transparency and leveling the playing field between institutional players and retail investors.

Instead, thanks to this latest extension, hedge funds can keep their short positions hidden for at least another 24 months.

Why the Delay?

The official explanation? The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the SEC to conduct a more comprehensive "cumulative economic analysis." In practical terms, well-funded lawyers representing trade groups successfully argued that transparency requirements are too burdensome or expensive for their clients.

Dissenting SEC Commissioner Caroline A. Crenshaw didn't mince words about what's really happening here. She described the move as bureaucratic stalling, plain and simple.

"It should not take two years to complete a narrow revision of the Rules' economic analyses consistent with the Court's request," Crenshaw said in her statement. "This could be done expeditiously and concisely. However, rather than following the Court's narrow directive, the Commission not so subtly signals that no one should even bother with implementation; the Rules will be changing."

Her concern is that hedge funds now have plenty of time to identify new loopholes, dismantle any compliance systems they've built or simply wait for political winds to shift enough that the entire rule gets scrapped.

"Under the guise of compliance date extensions, we are attempting to camouflage a new willingness to repeatedly bend the rules until they break — eroding the rule of law," Crenshaw stated.

So retail investors will have to wait at least a few more years to get even a glimpse into how the most powerful market participants actually operate. The transparency that was supposed to arrive after the financial crisis remains perpetually just around the corner.

SEC Hands Short Sellers Another Two-Year Delay on Disclosure Rules

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
The SEC just pushed back Form SHO disclosure requirements until 2028, marking the second major delay for rules meant to shed light on massive short positions held by hedge funds.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has once again given Wall Street's short-selling elite exactly what they wanted: more time. For the second time in two years, the agency tasked with protecting everyday investors has granted a two-year extension on Form SHO, pushing the implementation date all the way to January 2, 2028.

Form SHO was supposed to be one of those sensible post-2008 reforms. Part of the Dodd-Frank package, it's designed to pull secretive short-selling hedge funds into at least partial daylight. The concept is straightforward: require the biggest players to confidentially disclose their massive short positions to the SEC, which would then publish the information as aggregated, delayed data.

This matters because the data could give retail investors critical tools to identify potential stock manipulation, spot concentrated short attacks and understand which stocks are being heavily targeted. Right now, that information exists mostly in rumors and speculation.

The GameStop Lesson

Remember Melvin Capital and GameStop Corp. (GME)? Back in 2021, Melvin Capital, run by Gabe Plotkin, held a huge short position against the struggling video game retailer. Retail investors on social media figured out that GameStop was shorted more than 100% of its available shares and coordinated a massive buying campaign.

The resulting short squeeze sent the stock from around $20 to nearly $500. Melvin Capital lost billions and eventually closed its doors entirely.

Form SHO would require hedge funds to disclose positions like that. Even though the data would be aggregated rather than showing individual positions, it would still represent a meaningful step toward transparency and leveling the playing field between institutional players and retail investors.

Instead, thanks to this latest extension, hedge funds can keep their short positions hidden for at least another 24 months.

Why the Delay?

The official explanation? The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the SEC to conduct a more comprehensive "cumulative economic analysis." In practical terms, well-funded lawyers representing trade groups successfully argued that transparency requirements are too burdensome or expensive for their clients.

Dissenting SEC Commissioner Caroline A. Crenshaw didn't mince words about what's really happening here. She described the move as bureaucratic stalling, plain and simple.

"It should not take two years to complete a narrow revision of the Rules' economic analyses consistent with the Court's request," Crenshaw said in her statement. "This could be done expeditiously and concisely. However, rather than following the Court's narrow directive, the Commission not so subtly signals that no one should even bother with implementation; the Rules will be changing."

Her concern is that hedge funds now have plenty of time to identify new loopholes, dismantle any compliance systems they've built or simply wait for political winds to shift enough that the entire rule gets scrapped.

"Under the guise of compliance date extensions, we are attempting to camouflage a new willingness to repeatedly bend the rules until they break — eroding the rule of law," Crenshaw stated.

So retail investors will have to wait at least a few more years to get even a glimpse into how the most powerful market participants actually operate. The transparency that was supposed to arrive after the financial crisis remains perpetually just around the corner.