As result of the GameStop "upset", I came to realise that retail brokers not only make money by charging commission, but also by untransparently borrowing my stocks for shorting.
At this point, I want to know:
1. How can I find out if my broker borrows my stocks for shorting?
2. How big is the risk for me? Can I lose part of my stocks due to reckless shorting?
I asked the same two questions to my broker (Avanza in Sweden), and they haven't replied after 4 weeks.
https://ibkr.info/article/1839
I think many other brokers do basically same, but aren’t transparent and don’t share the profits.
In the US, brokers cannot lend out your shares without your knowledge. Brokerage customers can opt into a program called Fully Paid [Securities] Lending, in which the broker pays you a monthly fee to lend your shares out to short sellers. The fee you're paid is higher for securities that are harder to come by; shares of an up and coming marijuana company will be much more rare than large-cap stocks in the S&P 500. (Brokerages often own their own shares of popular stocks that they can lend out, so there's no need to pay customers for access to them.) You can recall the shares at any time, so they're still considered liquid. The only "catch" is that you can't vote as a shareholder without first recalling them.
Here are some product pages for FPL programs run by Schwab[1] and Fidelity[2]. Most (all?) large US-based brokerages seem to offer this in some form.
[1] https://client.schwab.com/secure/file/P-5182696/MKT33373-05.... [2] https://www.fidelity.com/trading/fully-paid-lending
That said, the following rules of thumb for American brokerages might be of interest:
* Securities held in cash accounts are not loaned out without the customer's approval. Brokers may offer a revenue-sharing agreement, for example IBKR's "Stock Yield Enhancement Program" at <https://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/index.php?f=46942>.
* Margin account agreements usually have wording allowing the broker to loan out securities held on margin. This is important for holders of dividend-producing equities in a margin account, because taxation of "payments in lieu" is different from that of qualified dividends.
* In both cases, loaned securities are covered by cash collateral. The exact percentage varies between brokers; as one data point, IBKR collateralizes the loan at 102% [0].
* Retail brokerages have insurance on the first $500k USD of assets per account, including $250k of cash, through the SIPC[1]. This is designed to protect customer assets if your brokerage enters liquidation, and although it doesn't protect loaned shares, it does protect your retail account from being impaired by another customer's short going wrong.
[0] https://gdcdyn.interactivebrokers.com/Universal/servlet/Regi...
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Securities_Investor_Protection...
https://www.nordnet.se/se/marknad/aktier/aktielaneprogrammet
On US listed stocks there is a very good chance you don’t own them at all. You just have certain contractual rights to them.
(Note: I believe the counter party risk with lending for shorts or Cede & Co custody is extremely far down the list when talking about risks in the equities market)
Get a new broker. I've had some fairly complex securities questions in the past and my broker (Fidelity) always had someone on the phone to talk it out with or inquire further and get back to me.
2. Yes, looks like it. Have a look at https://www.avanza.se/konton-lan-prislista/konton/kapitalfor....
(Quick translation from the Avanza link: they have a security worth 105% of the value of the borrowed stocks, so if Morgan Stanley goes bankrupt, Avanza tries to buy the stocks back. If trading is stopped, or stocks cannot be bought back for other reasons, you'd be compensated monetarily.)
Other countries may of course do things differently.
Technically you could lose shares loaned to short sellers, but it would happen under some pretty extreme circumstances. Basically, the short seller would have to go into default and be unable to return the shares; then, your brokerage would have to also be in default and be unable to buy the shares needed to return them to your account. I have never been in this situation but I think most brokerages would try to offer a cash settlement for the lost shares. If the brokerage is bankrupt and was unable to transfer your account to a solvent brokerage, then, as far as I know, you would be a creditor during the bankruptcy proceeding and would be "first in line" i.e. you would have to be paid before the bond- or stockholders of the company.
To compensate for this sort of risk short sellers must make interest payments, and usually brokers will share the interest payments with the client that they borrowed shares from (and thus the client must know the shares are being loaned).
[EDIT: Looked it up, should have done this beforehand; if your brokerage is in default, you would be entitled to withdraw the collateral the brokerage had deposited for the loaned shared.]
https://www.investopedia.com/investing/role-securities-lendi...
> BlackRock, Inc. (BLK) managing director for securities lending Jason Strofs indicates that this is a significant business: "about $3 trillion of our assets we consider lendable, which consists of iShares ETFs, mutual funds, collective trusts, and separate accounts," he says. "Across that $3 trillion, roughly 9% of those securities are out on loan on any given day."
SLB is a double-edged sword, for example since it increases float it may also work to reduce spread, reducing transaction costs for everyone
Whether the benefits will outweight or not depends on your investment habits and which brokerage you use.
2. All of the money you invest.
Since you don’t really own the shares, the broker (in my case IG) hold them on my behalf in a ledger that simply allocates the shares to me then I imagine they can do what they like with the shares. So long as the money is there when you want to liquidate it then it’s irrelevant to some degree.
In the UK the value of the shares I believe is fenced off in a separate entity so that should the broker go bankrupt the money is still there for shareholders (ie shares bought in the platform, not shareholders in the brokerage) and inaccessible to creditors, this was tested in the high court in the UK recently when the administrators tried to use this ring fenced money to pay their fees as the broker couldn’t pay it themselves and the ring fence was upheld by the court.
Not sure if any of this helps but it’s good to remember you don’t actually own the shares, they are held by someone else and they can probably do what they like with it.