Synopses & Reviews
Most companies play by the rules, releasing accurate information and making a genuine effort to generate profits for their shareholders. But occasionally a company and a group of stock promoters will deliberately withhold crucial information, disseminate false information, or simply be an outright sham. When this deception is publicly disclosed, all sorts of accusations and denials will fly, but experience has shown that sooner rather than later the company's stock is likely to decline sharply. And anyone selling short the stock of such a company will profit when it crashes. Manuel Asensio is probably the world's most visible practitioner of this brand of aggressive short selling. And this is his story.
For over five years, in the midst of the greatest bull run the stock markets have ever seen, Mr. Asensio has been taking on public corporations large and small with the twin goals of exposing deception and making money. And for over five years Asensio has been harassed by his targets and private regulators with conflicts of interest, dragged through the courts in attempts to silence him, and disparaged in the press. Yet in those five-plus years not one of his many statements and reports has ever been proved even partially false much less inaccurate or incomplete. And in that time, his meticulous research and bold declarations have indeed enriched any investor savvy and prudent enough to pay attention and act accordingly.
Mr. Asensio has published "short sell" recommendations on over two dozen companies, and in this book he relates the highlights, including:
* Exposing the fast-rising young English banker who caused Morgan Grenfell to lose half a billion dollars yet avoided prosecution by appearing in court in a dress
* Determining that one of the very first red-hot $120 Internet stocks was promoting a dated and virtually unsellable technology
* Uncovering the accounting trickery and press-release sleight of hand that was bogging down the largest public-works project in the history of New Jersey and causing Turnpike commuters to blow their stacks
* Digging into the purchases of a highly regarded Dreyfus mutual-fund manager and finding a mother lode of junk stocks in which the manager held a compromising interest. The manager was fined $50,000 and sanctioned by the SEC
In this lively and often funny book, Manuel Asensio not only recounts his "greatest hits," but also shows you how to identify these shaky stocks yourself. These stories reveal that anyone- Arthur Andersen, senior exchange officials, and state public officials-can get caught up in a complex web of deception. Who knows? Your portfolio might have one or two of these stocks in it right now. Better find out before someone else does...
Review
"Asensio is the sort you would choose to lead an infantry change against a fortified position...the tone [of Sold Short] is pure Asensio: attack, attack, attack...Sold Short is most useful for the detail it provides on the stock promoter's bag of tricks...the standard work are not as revealing on the social, as well as the financial, patterns that fraud takes...Sold Short is a helpful book..."--Financial Times, May 5, 2001
Review
He's in the Index, Too
Look for Wall Street and business-media types to scan index pages in the just-published Sold Short: Uncovering Deception in the Markets by famous short-seller Manuel P. Asensio. He delights in naming dozens of analysts, journalists and brokerages he says helped pump up dubious stocks that later tanked after he issued withering research reports. On the next-to-last page Asensio finally mentions the $75,000 fine he paid regulators last year to settle charges that, among other things, he and his Asensio & Co. overstated their own investment record.
--Forbes May 28, 2001
Short-sellers have a natural appeal to journalists. Members of
both occupations require deep scepticism about the motives of
the rich and powerful, and both engender a black humour that
can be off-putting to the innocent and uninitiated.
Short-selling is the sale of borrowed or never-owned securities
with the intention of profiting from a decline in their price. The
profit is made when the shares price has declined, and the
short-seller is able to repay the loan of the securities or makes
good the promise to deliver with securities bought at a lower
price.
The profit is limited to the price of the security at the time the
short sale is made; the loss can be as high as a security's price
can rise.
There are quiet, behind-the-scenes short-sellers - and then
there is Manuel Asensio. His brokerage house, Asensio
Company, specialises in executing short sales for clients, some
of which are almost certainly investment funds in which he has
an interest.
He searches for frauds and simple overvaluations in the
securities market, sells them short on behalf of his clients, and
then trumpets their shortcomings to the world.
Along with other journalists, I have made use of Asensio's
material, though not without checking it first. When I did, it
turned out to be quite reliable.
Not everyone has the same feeling about Asensio. He is
regularly sued by promoters and others connected with the
objects of his research and mockery. He has, however, only
paid one fine to the National Association of Securities Dealers,
and believes he has been vindicated after he agreed to that
settlement.
Now he has written a book, Sold Short, to tell the world how he
does it.
To use the type of military metaphor popular on Wall Street,
Asensio is the sort you would choose to lead an infantry charge
against a fortified position. However, as another short-seller
says: "I think I'd prefer to wait for the armoured division."
Even though the book has a professional co-author, Jack Barth,
the tone is pure Asensio: attack, attack, attack. Promoters are
scum. Establishment companies are corrupted by greed. A
typical sentence reads: "The bad guys were on the other side of
the river, laughing, with their saddlebags full of loot." Asensio
was wise to choose short-selling over a career in the diplomatic
service.
Sold Short is most useful for the detail it provides on the stock
promoter's bag of tricks. You can get more stringent, academic
detail on securities valuation from such classics as Graham and
Dodd's Securities Analysis, but the standard works are not as
revealing on the social, as well as the financial, patterns that
fraud takes.
Another short-seller said Asensio's analysis was good, but that
the market values of the companies he goes after were too
small to have the liquidity a large fund needed.
Asensio's response was an unrelenting lecture on the market
caps of his targets along with cutting inferences about the
courage and work habits of the unnamed commentator.
Sold Short is a helpful book, though not a literary masterpiece.
The reader and the market participant should be fully aware that
Asensio is talking up (or down) his position. But he's very
straightforward about that.
--Financial Times May 5, 2001
Synopsis
A revealing expos? by one of today's most controversial and successful short sellers
According to a 1998 New York Times article, "Satanism has a better reputation in financial circles than does short-selling . . . The controversy over Mr. Asensio is reigniting the debate over short-selling and the role it plays in the stock market, a debate that stretches back to Jesse Livermore." Manuel Asensio has taken this debate to a whole new level, not only short-selling deceptive companies but also researching and publicly exposing them. Each time Asensio practices his type of aggressive short selling he is branded "the Devil's own Trader," but time and again his unpopular assessments have proved dead on the money.
"Sold Short reads like an action-packed and gripping detective story, exposing shocking and criminal tales that make the Hollywood scandal sheets look like a high school pantomime. Asensio is a brave and heroic bullfighter who dares to go up against the global stampede of the wildest bull market. He courageously nails down, one by one, grossly overvalued and corrupt companies."-Tony Shafrazi, Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York
"Sold Short is a rip-roaring ride through the netherworld of short selling. Part comedy, part tragedy, part horror flick, Asensio uncovers a world that would be ripe for sitcom portrayal where big-name fund managers dress in drag, buy silly stocks, but (and here's the tragedy) lose millions. If short selling is up your alley, you shouldn't miss this book. And if you'd sooner die than go short, you should read this book to make sure one of your longs isn't made of fool's gold."-Parker Quillen, Quilcap Corp.
Synopsis
Manuel Asensio geh rt zu den wenigen erfolgreichen Leerverk ufern, die ber ihre Gesch fte reden. Viele professionelle und individuelle Anleger praktizieren Shortverk ufe - aber dar ber redet man nicht. Asensio wird viel gelobt und auch heftig kritisiert, aber seine Methode funktioniert. Sold Short ist eine spannende und faszinierende Lekt re mit zahlreichen Anekdoten ber Asensios Leben und die mitunter mysteri se Praxis der Leerverk ufe.
Bei Leerverk ufen verkauft man geliehene Aktien, d.h. Aktien, die man nicht besitzt, um durch einen anschlie enden Kursrutsch durch R ckkauf dieser Aktien Gewinne zu erzielen. Asensio nutzt diese Methode mit gro em Erfolg. Er vertraut auf das kapitalistische System, in dem jeder von steigenden Kursen profitieren will und kritisiert, wie manche Unternehmen durch manipulierte Informationen die Kurse beeinflussen. Auf diese Kurse konzentriert sich Asensio bevorzugt bei seinen Leerverk ufen und deckt damit Aktienmanipulationen von skrupellosen Unternehmen auf, die h ufig in den Schlagzeilen zu finden sind, wie z.B. General Nutrition Corp. und Network Solutions. Hier verr t er einige seiner bew hrten Techniken zur Minimierung des bestehenden und oft auch unvermeidbaren Risikos bei Leerverk ufen, aber auch zur Maximierung von Gewinnen.
Synopsis
A revealing expose by one of today's most successful and controversial speculators
Short-selling, or betting on a drop in the price of a stock, has been described by its many opponents as everything from shady to downright evil. And no one today personifies the practice better than short-seller extraordinaire Manuel Asensio. Though he has been branded in the press as a market saboteur, Asensio staunchly defends his practices, claiming that, above all, he is out to expose rampant fraud being perpetrated by unscrupulous stock promoters. Is Asensio a "Minion of Satan" as they say in the online chat rooms, or is he really a misunderstood guardian angel of free market capitalism? In this tell-all account, Asensio offers readers a lively narrative, peppered with unforgettable anecdotes such as the story of why he shorted Diana, General Nutrition, Solv-Ex, Turbodyne, and many other high-profile stocks. And he arms investors with proven techniques for reducing the inherent risks of short-selling while maximizing returns. Clearly, Asensio invites both praise and criticism, but his methodology works, and Sold Short is a compelling and fascinating read about this often mysterious side of the market--and one of the most controversial individuals behind it.
Manuel Asensio (New York, NY) is founder and Chairman of Asensio & Co., Inc. He has over twenty years of corporate finance and research experience. He has been featured in Business Week, the Wall Street Journal, Barron's, Fortune, Forbes, Worth, the New York Times, New York magazine, and the New Republic, among other leading national and international publications.
Synopsis
Manuel Asensio (New York, NY) is founder and Chairman of Asensio & Co., Inc. He has over twenty years of corporate finance and research experience. He has been featured in Business Week, the Wall Street Journal, Barron's, Fortune, Forbes, Worth, the New York Times, New York magazine, and the New Republic, among other leading national and international publications.
Synopsis
A revealing exposé by one of today's most controversial and successful short sellers
According to a 1998 New York Times article, "Satanism has a better reputation in financial circles than does short-selling . . . The controversy over Mr. Asensio is reigniting the debate over short-selling and the role it plays in the stock market, a debate that stretches back to Jesse Livermore." Manuel Asensio has taken this debate to a whole new level, not only short-selling deceptive companies but also researching and publicly exposing them. Each time Asensio practices his type of aggressive short selling he is branded "the Devil's own Trader," but time and again his unpopular assessments have proved dead on the money.
"Sold Short reads like an action-packed and gripping detective story, exposing shocking and criminal tales that make the Hollywood scandal sheets look like a high school pantomime. Asensio is a brave and heroic bullfighter who dares to go up against the global stampede of the wildest bull market. He courageously nails down, one by one, grossly overvalued and corrupt companies."-Tony Shafrazi, Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York
"Sold Short is a rip-roaring ride through the netherworld of short selling. Part comedy, part tragedy, part horror flick, Asensio uncovers a world that would be ripe for sitcom portrayal where big-name fund managers dress in drag, buy silly stocks, but (and here's the tragedy) lose millions. If short selling is up your alley, you shouldn't miss this book. And if you'd sooner die than go short, you should read this book to make sure one of your longs isn't made of fool's gold."-Parker Quillen, Quilcap Corp.
About the Author
Manuel P. Asensio is founder and Chairman of Asensio & Co., Inc. He has over twenty years of corporate finance and research experience. He has been featured in Business Week, Fortune, Forbes, Worth, the New York Times, New York magazine, and the New Republic, among other leading publications. Mr. Asensio received his BS in economics and finance from The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and holds an MBA in investment management from Harvard University Graduate School of Business.
JACK BARTH is a freelance writer and journalist. Mr. Barth's articles have been published in Worth, Spy, Outside, Premiere, and Rolling Stone. In addition, he has written for television, including episodes for The Simpsons and for the Comedy Channel. He is the author of four books: Roadside Elvis, Roadside Hollywood, American Quest, and Roadside America.
Table of Contents
Diana Day Afternoon.
Making of the Short Seller.
The First Short: General Nutrition Takes Ill.
Diana: "The Switch Works!"
Solv-Ex: Something Oily.
Schonberg's List.
By-the-Numbers Stock Promotions.
Gross Mismanagement.
Abusing the Process.
How to Sell Short.
Get Ready for a Big One.
Index.