Hindenburg Research to shut shop: Nathan Anderson, the founder of US-based short seller Hindenburg Research, announced on Wednesday that the firm would disband. The firm is known for reporting ...
Hindenburg Research was the brain child of Nathan Anderson. He founded the company in 2017 and served as its CEO for a while. With an emphasis on equities, credit, and derivatives analysis ...
Hindenburg Research, known for its controversial short-selling practices, has ceased operations, sparking questions about its market impact and legality. Market expert Ajay Bagga suggests financial ...
On January 15, Nate Anderson, who founded Hindenburg in 2017, through a note, announced his decision to disband the short-selling firm. Image: Bloomberg In the note, Nate Anderson said ...
Hindenburg closure: Possible reasons: 1. It operated in a grey zone, publishing negative reports and taking short positions, including via hedge funds who were not disclosing their positions 2 ...
Hindenburg Research, the US-based short seller that had targeted several business entities including the Adani Group, is going to be disbanded, founder Nate Anderson has said. "I have made the ...
Nathan Anderson, founder of Hindenburg Research, has announced plans to disband the firm, known for its investigative reports that triggered significant short-selling activity and regulatory probes.
Hindenburg Research, the American short seller that gained attention for its reports alleging financial misconduct by business empires including the Gautam Adani-led Adani Group, is shutting down. The ...
Founder Nathan Anderson says he and his team are ready to move on to the next chapter in their lives after just eight years Activist short-seller firm Hindenburg Research is calling it quits after ...
Hindenburg was named after the high-profile disaster of Germany’s Hindenburg airship in 1937, which ignited as it flew into New Jersey. After finding potential wrongdoing, Hindenburg published a ...
The firm, named after the 1937 Hindenburg airship disaster, focused on identifying "man-made disasters" like accounting irregularities, corporate mismanagement, and hidden financial dealings.