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Toronto-Dominion Bank T.TD

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.TD.P.M | TD | T.TD.P.A | TDBCP | T.TD.P.B | TDBKF | T.TD.P.C | T.TD.P.D | T.TD.P.E | T.TD.P.I | TNTTF | T.TD.P.J

The Toronto-Dominion Bank (the Bank) operates as a bank in North America. The Bank's segments include Canadian Personal and Commercial Banking, U.S. Retail, Wealth Management and Insurance, and Wholesale Banking. Its Canadian Personal and Commercial Banking segment offers a full range of financial products and services to approximately 15 million customers in the Bank’s personal and commercial banking businesses in Canada. Its U.S. Retail segment offers a range of financial products and services under the brand TD Bank, America’s Most Convenient Bank. U.S. Retail Segment also TD Auto Finance U.S., TD Wealth (U.S.) business. Wholesale Banking segment operates under the brand name TD Securities, which offers a range of capital markets and corporate and investment banking services to corporate, government, and institutional clients. Its Wealth Management and Insurance segment provides wealth solutions and insurance protection to approximately six million customers in Canada.


TSX:TD - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Apr 28, 2023 10:44am
345 Views
Post# 35419113

Fighting the Shorts

Fighting the Shorts

Academic studies continue to find that stocks targeted by short sellers tend to underperform.

As professor Lee Smales and co-authors note in a March paper published online by the Australian Economic Papers: “More recent research shows that short sellers are informed traders that make correct predictions to earn higher returns. As such, they are important contributors to market efficiency.”

Shareholders in companies with significant short positions or changes – see the following tables sourced from S3 Partners – are thus well advised to make sure their due diligence is solid.

A highlight from Table I is the huge jump of $2.1-billion in short interest for the Royal Bank of Canada This was a 77.1-per-cent increase from March. As of April 27, 2.7 per cent of RBC’s float was sold short, up sharply from 1.7% in March. 

The Bank of Montreal and Toronto-Dominion Bank  also had large increases in their short positions: $823.3-million and $445.4-million, respectively.

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