The SEC officially confirms the short squeeze meme that rocked Wall Street

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The SEC officially confirms the short squeeze meme that rocked Wall Street

After months of thorough investigation and thorough analysis into the January short squeeze meme that rocked Wall Street, and demanded a seething populist distrust in modern market structure, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission can now officially confirm that it happened.

In a long-awaited 44-page staff report released on Monday, the SEC recaps what led to the short squeeze on GameStop GME, and other meme stocks, what happened during the unprecedented market event and how zero-commission trading apps like Robinhood Hood and market makers like Citadel Securities responded to it.

Notably, there was no mention of any collusion or much else to chew on, other than individual investors got together and made things really weird for a few days.

While ink was sprinkled on mild musings regarding settlement timing, gamification of trading and — of course – payment for order flow, those points were mentioned almost entirely in hindsight and provided little more context than was expected in February to light House hearings into the GameStop squeeze.

Payment for order flow is frequently discussed in the option market, reads the report, digging into a conversation seemingly discussed ad nauseum since January. Potentially more so than in the equities market, but order flow executed execution that is purchased and executed by consolidators on exchange. There also had a section in which SEC staff debated the notion that the crazy surge was the result of a Gamma squeeze on the stock and attempts to answer the retail investor theory that the shorts failed to cover in the chaos of the squeeze.

In a string of paragraphs that will surely enrage Reddit s Apes, the SEC concluded that there was no Gamma squeeze and that short covering was not statistically relevant and was no match for GameStop bulls who just kept buying.

In a note accompanying the report, SEC chairman Gary Gensler writes that January's events gave us an opportunity to consider how we can further our efforts to make the equity markets as efficient, orderly and just as possible. Gensler's staff, however, appears to have taken a pass on the opportunity that many were waiting for them to grab with both hands: addressing market issues which have given rise to a daily skirmish between individual investors and institutional Wall Street short sellers.

Despite an investigation that took roughly the same amount of time to gestate a human being, the SEC conclusions take up roughly the last page and - a-half of its report.

While the closing section does specifically address why a brokerage would limit trading, gamification of trading, payment for order flow, dark pools, short selling and market structure, none of the SEC s findings were submitted as recommendations. Instead, they were carefully presented as topics that the SEC thinks merit further study.

Even the language chosen to present the conclusions come off as breathtakingly vanilla.

There are many different types of investors, the conclusion reads through the report. They buy and sell stocks for many different reasons. In addition to sounding like a college sophomore attempting to fill out their Finance 101 Word count the report also likely will disappoint many investors looking to Gensler as a man of action who had made it clear to Congress that he was on the side of retail investors.

While the late afternoon release of the report will prevent real-time market response from retail investors, one can assume that Reddit boards will be rife with outrage after Tuesday s opening bell.

But at least Apes can enjoy Monday evening as both GameStop and AMC Entertainment led an early meme stock surge. GameStop in the green surged spiked 1.7%, while AMC surged 5.5%.