Personal Finance & Money Asked on February 21, 2021
Consider a company with heavily shorted stock. If that company puts itself up for sale and a friendly (shareholder approved) acquisition happens, can it result in a short squeeze driving the price of the stock (of course, temporarily) above the agreed/announced takeover price?
Note that I don’t mean the price of the stock being higher than the buyout price due to effects discussed in Why is Dell currently trading above the buyout price?
I am only interested if the price can spike up above the set limit because of the short squeeze effect.
Yes, short covering can raise share price above the offered buy out price. This occasionally occurs when the buy out price is significantly higher than current price and there's a gap up.
If there are no other companies rumored to be possibly offering a higher buy out price then share price will correct down to the buy out price as new shorters come in, hoping that the buy out offer is solid.
Answered by Bob Baerker on February 21, 2021
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