Jeff Miller | Aug 16, 2014 11:45PM ET
A seriously flawed story about George Soros got a lot of media coverage Friday. In the midst of options expiration and breaking news from Ukraine, this story might not seem very important.
It was big enough to earn a play from all of the major news sources and a feature on CNBC.
No one got the story right!
I am not going to list all of the errors. If anyone had exposed the problem they would be in line for my Silver Bullet award! Instead, everyone seems to have lamely tagged along with some actual filing . Here are the problems. Those that should be obvious to anyone:
These items might require an options professional, but there are plenty of them around who would be happy to comment:
To summarize: Soros might have a boatload of cheap tail risk puts. He might have a put spread, including one that might actually lean long. He could have some kind of volatility play, since he reports both long calls and puts. He might have taken the entire position off weeks ago.
Do we really care about this? You probably should not be influenced by George Soros’s position from 45 days ago, but it gets played as a big story.
Our news sources completely failed on this story. What went wrong?
Budget cuts? Summer vacations? A shorter news cycle?
Whatever the reason, the mainstream media sources are rushing to publish questionable information and conclusions. I suppose there are a few investors out there who made a decision based upon what George Soros was doing. Some sources said this was evidence that “the big one” was at hand.
And of course, the government is no help. The required filings are well-intentioned, but do not provide even the most basic information required to discern the actual position of these managers.
I always try to make a constructive suggestion. Requiring the actual holdings — strike prices, both long and short — would allow readers of the filing to evaluate the position as of the stated date. That is the best the government can do. Trying to put a number on the position value is a moving target that changes with time and price. Leaving out the short positions turns the exercise into a joke.
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