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Whether rightly or wrongly, Trump Media and Technology Group (NASDAQ: DJT) is convinced that its stock is being manipulated by illegal means, and the company appears to be leaving no stone unturned in its tenacious quest to hold a select clique of market makers accountable, going so far as to try to drag the US House of Representative's Committee on the Judiciary, Committee on Financial Services, Committee on Ways and Means, and Committee on Oversight and Reform into this brewing controversy.
As we noted earlier in a dedicated post, Trump Media and Technology Group published a comprehensive list of FAQs on the 17th of April to address investor concerns, including those related to short-selling. Specifically, the company advised its investors to contact their respective brokers to restrict their shares from being loaned out for short positions.
Next, on the 19th of April, Trump Media penned a letter to urge the Nasdaq exchange to probe the "naked" short-selling of its shares as well as its inclusion in the so-called threshold list. In the letter, the company identified four market-makers as the purported culprits behind the alleged manipulation of its share price: Citadel Securities, VIRTU Americas, G1 Execution Services, and Jane Street Capital. This letter then prompted a riposte from Citadel, which not only rejected Trump Media and Technology Group's allegations but also chose to characterize the company's CEO, Devin Nunes, in a less-than-stellar light, euphemistically speaking.
On the 23rd of April, Trump Media published a 3-step plan for its investors to combat rampant short-selling, recommending that investors hold their DJT shares in a cash account at their
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