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The Media Social Networks The Almighty Buck Twitter

Twitter Stock Jumps Nearly 8 Percent After Fake Report 92

vivaoporto writes: As noted by Re/code and many other outlets, Twitter stock jumped nearly 8 percent after a bogus report, attributed to Bloomberg News, said Twitter had received a $31 billion buyout offer. The fake story, which cited "people with knowledge of the situation," appeared on a website (Google Cache version) made to look like Bloomberg's business news page and claimed the company had received a takeover offer worth $31 billion.

The website domain, bloomberg.market (now suspended), was registered Friday, according to a search of ICANN's records. The identity of the person or company who registered it is not publicly available. Close scrutiny flagged a number of questionable elements in the report, like the name of Twitter's former chief executive, Richard Costolo, being misspelled. By late afternoon, the web page for bloomberg.market was no longer operable. A message posted on the page said, "account suspended." A spokesman for Bloomberg confirmed the takeover article was fake.

In May, a fake bid for another company, Avon Products, sent its shares as much as 20 percent higher. That offer involved a document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Last month the SEC sued a Bulgarian man, Nedko Nedev, and said he and five others worked together to violate securities laws by creating fake takeover offers. Robert Heim, a former lawyer at the SEC, said these kinds of schemes will probably persist because news spreads so fast over social media and traders have to react so quickly.
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Twitter Stock Jumps Nearly 8 Percent After Fake Report

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  • good! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by djradon ( 105400 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @09:20PM (#50113837) Homepage Journal

    hopefully this will encourage misinformation awareness or foster some web-of-trust technology.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Not likely. Some moneyed interests obviously were behind the reports, made a huge pile of money from them, and they're unlikely to be connected directly with the individuals who were caught. It will happen again whenever someone thinks they can make free cash without consequence.
      • Maybe the "interests" behind the reports were just some crazy day trader with potential upside of chump change compared to total market movement. Or, If not this time, some time soon it will be kids or terrorists or a disgruntled ex-employee.

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        Not likely. Some moneyed interests obviously were behind the reports, made a huge pile of money from them

        The exchange should identify the fraudulent article as the reason for the price movement and break all the trades made yesterday that involved a Buy/Sell more than 2% higher than the previous day's closing price.

        • That would take money away from the megabanks doing high frequency trading. Its the SEC's job to protect the corruption.

          The real crime here is that some nobodys also made some money on this. They will have it confiscated and will be arrested, of course.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You've missed the point. Several billion dollars worth of value appeared and disappeared in 24 hours.

      This would seem to suggest that the value of speculation is zero.

      Why then do we have to have laws to protect against speculation by idiots?

      These are the same idiots that just made several billion dollars just disappear. Who gives a fuck what happens to them?

      • by rioki ( 1328185 )

        The stock market (tactical investment) is generally speaking a zero sum game. So a good number of people got suckered out of their money.

        What makes the stock market not zero sum is increase in money volume (inflation) and dividends (actual value produced by the companies). Because of that, unless you dabble in high frequency trading, value based investment is the best way to go.

        • by smaddox ( 928261 )

          An increase in the money supply only leads to inflation if there is no concurrent increase in wealth (goods, assets, etc.).

      • by gsslay ( 807818 )

        Why then do we have to have laws to protect against speculation by idiots?

        Same reason we have laws for all kinds of fraud. Being an idiot is not illegal. Being an idiot does not mean it is open season on you by criminals, and the law doesn't care.

    • Re:good! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Wednesday July 15, 2015 @01:39AM (#50114707) Homepage Journal

      this will only encourage similar crap.

      someone made a tidy profit on it.

    • Nah, it'll just convince corps that they have own every conceivable TLD with their name in it.

  • Come on. Do they really *have* to react so quickly? Faster than anyone can do some due diligence? Of course, they'll say that they have to, because if they don't, their competitors will...but maybe we need some reform on this front.

    Captcha: griefs

    • If you can react quickly enough to buy before the stock price finishes going up, then even if it is a fake trend you'll still make money so long as you can sell it before it drops below the price you bought it at. Of course, any money you make is at the cost of someone who was less agile/informed/lucky than you. That's zero sum games for you (technically not exactly zero sum, but it's not like the true value of a company actually changes much in a day).

      • That's zero sum games for you (technically not exactly zero sum, but it's not like the true value of a company actually changes much in a day).

        Stop calling the modern economy a zero-sum game. It is not. It is a negative-sum game. We are spending natural capital more rapidly than it is replenished. When we run out, the game ends, and we all lose.

        • I thought it was slightly positive-sum (though negligibly so when it comes to high frequency trading). Although that might only be true for the big players nowadays.

        • by smaddox ( 928261 )

          Wouldn't that make it a positive sum game?

          Unless you include the natural capital (resources) in the system, in which case it's a zero sum game. Of course then you should also include the influx of energy from the Sun, which again makes it a positive sum game.

          • Unless you include the natural capital (resources) in the system, in which case it's a zero sum game.

            No, it's obviously a negative-sum game because we're spending those and not replenishing them. If they were being replenished at the same rate that they're being depleted, as well as not creating negative externalities, then you would be correct. You aren't.

  • ...if something like this broke saying Apple had received a takeover offer from Time Warner?

    What about the subsequent stock run? Holy shit, that would cripple the market.

    • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @09:45PM (#50113951)
      Actually, several years ago there was some article posted to a part of CNN that allowed for user submitted content that claimed a person had seen Jobs being taken to a hospital after having a heart attack. Other sites started to run wild with the rumor and it caused Apple's stock to take a rather large plunge. Here's an article covering it [cnet.com] that turned up after a quick Google search.
      • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @10:31PM (#50114157)

        That gives me an idea

        If anyone sees an article about Steve Jobs coming back from the dead to lead Apple again, it's totally legit.

        • That gives me an idea

          If anyone sees an article about Steve Jobs coming back from the dead to lead Apple again, it's totally legit.

          Knowing Wallstreet analysts, this will actually drive down AAPL. I can see Business Insider's headline: "Apple's need to bring back Steve Jobs from the dead proves they are doomed."

          Not to mention that all the Steve-Jobs-would-never-do-this arguments from Apple critics would revert back to Steve-Jobs-and-his-usual-blunders.

  • so you can see who bought and sold, right? so track it. and wipe the accounts of any who are complicit. zero it all out.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      or maybe just stop ascribing substantial real world value to the activities of gamblers and speculators

    • by Anonymous Coward

      so you can see who bought and sold, right?

      Haha, good luck. TWTR has a Average Daily Volume of 20,664,680 trades. Today's volume was 50,045,757.

      • TWTR has a Average Daily Volume of 20,664,680 shares. Today's volume was 50,045,757.

        FTFY

    • so you can see who bought and sold, right? so track it. and wipe the accounts of any who are complicit. zero it all out.

      The problem with that idea is that the person who profited most may not be the person who set up the scam. If they have a clue, and they obviously do, they won't be the first to trade on the news, either. They'll wait for the graph to kick up a little before they trade. So how do you plan to identify them?

  • Take advantage of those automated stock algorithms, use Twitter to falsely boost stock prices into an unsustainable bubble, watch as all the human elements do the wrong thing, and let it explode right in their faces.

    Turn Wall Street's own nickel and dime cheat game straight against them.

    • Huh ? Wall Street makes money from moving money. Every up and down move, the higher volume the more of it stays at WS.
      The net result of this scam: some investors lost, some won, but traders made a commission. Twice, going up and going down.

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        I guess you haven't been paying attention to China and its most recent bubble break which nailed their ass for a 6 TRILLION DOLLAR market correction.

        We could make much worse happen here in the USA thanks to the even heavier reliance upon automated transaction bots that watch things like Twitter and make trades based upon various algorithms based on language used.

        Traders might make a commission but that's not going to do them shit when the value of the dollar goes out completely.

        The losing investors will los

    • boost stock prices into an unsustainable bubble, watch as all the human elements do the wrong thing, and let it explode right in their faces.

      Like in 2008?

  • If you really want to get away with something like this, learn to spell so you won't get caught!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Don't they know that to do this right they need to be a billionaire and own about $7 billion's worth of a company's stock, then directly lobby the company's CEO to expand the stock buy back program to push shares higher? All the while leveraging multiple media outlets to repeatedly state that the company's stock is undervalued by half in order to get even more people to buy up shares to keep pushing that price up?

    You say you don't have $7 billion? Just run a hedge fund and make up rumors about a company,

  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Wednesday July 15, 2015 @12:53AM (#50114601) Journal

    Spotted the problem right there. The stock market is not a tool for investment anymore: it's a gambling house and a system to extract wealth from long-term investors. Make it compulsory to hold one's shares for at least 6 months after purchase, and the problem solves itself. Of course, the fat cats don't want this, and they are the ones who have the actual power, so nothing will change.

  • by corychristison ( 951993 ) on Wednesday July 15, 2015 @01:25AM (#50114671)

    1. Buy stock in $LARGE_CORP, sit on it a while
    2. Register bloomberg domain under generic, believable gTLD.
    3. Create fake report about $LARGE_CORP being bought out at high valuation.
    4. Spread fake article around social media.
    5. Profit!

    I think we finally found out what the value of ??? is.

  • Facebook, Avon, what other household names will inexperienced traders jump on soon as they read some story on a fake new site ?
  • Just check who sold a lot of shares and investigate that person, he/she's most likely to be the culprit..
  • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 15, 2015 @04:34AM (#50115117)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • These hair trigger traders! They deserve all they get. Jumping at every whiff of every rumor of every eavesdropper near the watercooler. haaa haa haa.

    Wait

    I hear laughter, not sobs. Whats going on? Let me eavesdrop on them.

    Hair trigger trader A: "Hey Jumpin Jack, how much did you lose in that fake story about twitter?"

    Hair trigger trader B: "Come on, Frenetic Fred, you and I know both very well, we never lose any money. My index fund customers, 401K investing idiots, they lost may be a couple of billio

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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