Awesome WHYDRS team. Thanks for your work!

I feel this work is early, but spot on. GameStop can set the precedent for household investors waking up, realizing how the market works and with DRS have a relatively easy way to really impact the market.

As the question bothered me if GameStop is such an outlier or more or less business as usual, I gathered data and did some graphs. I never really finished or published them, cause I feel that still with GameStop and DRS we are testing an hypothesis and the result is still to be seen (successful business & high DRS & huge shorts should positively corelate with the price). Why start DRSing other stocks if the impact of the “biggest DRSing community” is still not really proven. At the same time, if the hypothesis proofs to be right, other stocks will follow.

However, I feel that here might be the place to share the drafts for Days /w FTD, 10y Turnover and daily average FTDs (as % of shares outstanding). I also did some other analysis, like price elasticity. This is not financial advice, also please proof and test the numbers, I might have made errors.

Sources:

10y Turnover (volume / shares oustanding) to Daily avg FTD

Days with FTD and daily avg FTDs as % of Shares Outstanding

Same as above but zoomed out

The work was inspired by u/sdfprwggv . Thanks! Even if I didn’t finish the work - maybe someone wants to continue.

Could also provide the source. Everything was written in Python.

  • beyond_mythos@lemmy.whynotdrs.orgOP
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    1 year ago

    GME is certainly an outlier over 10y. One of a few. If one looks in specific years GME looks rather normal in this group of 300-400 outliers.

    So, yes, GME is probably sold many times the outstanding shares, but so are a lot of other stocks, too.

    Though, not many have RC.