Originally Posted by
Baa_Baa
We talk about retail shareholder damage, but what about these big guys? Do they not see what we think we see, or are they locked in through their funds or what? Surely if they do see calamity, they'd be doing something about reducing their exposure?
96092868 shares (8.56%) HSBC NOMINEES (NEW ZEALAND) LIMITED
81867211 shares (7.29%) National Nominees New Zealand Limited
60820280 shares (5.42%) JP Morgan Chase Bank
54297955 shares (4.84%) HSBC NOMINEES (NEW ZEALAND) LIMITED
42724338 shares (3.81%) Citibank Nominees (NZ) Ltd
25046308 shares (2.23%) Accident Compensation Corporation
18546981 shares (1.65%) Cogent Nominees Limited
8022271 shares (0.71%) PREMIER NOMINEES LIMITED
7943351 shares (0.71%) New Zealand Superannuation Fund Nominees Limited
Sometimes in life something makes no sense until it does...I'm happy not holding a fundamentally bankrupt airline that is likely to be almost nationalised by the end of 2022. Imagine if some of these shareholders had sold AIR at $1.60 and bought into SKT at $1.80...