Naked short sales and selling an asset without borrowing it first are two of the leading causes for failures to deliver. In the case of naked short sales, a failure to deliver can have a compounding effect. For example, imagine that you arranged to purchase an asset on April 26 and take delivery of it on April 27. You then contracted to sell it to another investor on April 27 at a higher price than you paid. On April 26, you pay for the asset, but on the 27th, the other party did not deliver it. What makes it compound is that the investor you were going to sell to did the same thing you did, and the one they were selling to was also going to use it in a naked short sale. A recent example of failure to deliver focused on Gamestop (GME) shares. On January 28, 2021, more than one million Gamestop shares with an average price of $347.51 failed to deliver. Gamestop’s share price had risen from $20 per share two weeks earlier as retail investors from Reddit and other websites bought into the stock. According to the SEC, many investors blamed the failures to deliver on naked short selling.

How Does Failure To Deliver Work?

As explained previously, failure to deliver is not delivering the agreed-on assets or funds. However, the causes of a failure to deliver are not so easy to explain. In most cases, an entity fails to deliver because of circumstances out of its control; it might also fail because it didn’t account for and reduce the risks of any scenarios that might keep it from fulfilling its obligations.

Failure To Deliver Causes

Failure to deliver often happens due to errors or processing delays. In these instances, the delivery is expected to settle in the next few days when it’s removed from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) failure list. The party that failed to deliver might be fined for the failure. You might see instances of failure to deliver among investing transactions of any kind. The most well-known causes are short sales; however, the SEC notes that a failure to deliver can also happen on a long sale. The SEC tracks daily failures to deliver and publishes the data on its website. The data reported by the agency represents the aggregate net balance of shares not delivered on a particular day. For example, Ferroglobe PLC (GSM) was on the SEC’s failure to deliver list for February 2022. Its entry for Feb. 11, 2022, is:

Historic cyclicality of the metals industrySwings in market price and demandEquipment failuresThe ability to renew or acquire permits

Trade secrets, company processes, and several other internal factors are not required to be reported, so it may not be easy to figure out why a company failed to deliver. However, the company may publish why it happened to ease investors’ concerns.

What It Means for Individual Investors

For the most part, individual investors aren’t affected by failures to deliver. Individuals can’t perform naked short selling because SEC regulations require brokers to locate shares before individual transactions. It’s possible you could be on the other end of a naked short (i.e., the buyer who isn’t delivered shares), but in most cases, you’d be made whole in a few days. If you’re worried about naked short selling or being delivered phantom shares that don’t exist from a naked short seller, most brokers will offer to send you the physical share certificate for a fee.