I'm not sure pensions can invest in these funds..How does this affect pensions DW? Surley this is about shorting, if any pension funds held shares in Gamestop, which I doubt, then they were due to lose anyway if the shorters (is that a word?) were correct in their gamble in the first place. Don't forget the shorters borrowed shares hoping the value would drop, so not good for pension funds.
..however when the short seller makes a position he borrows a share at its current value, say $10, and has a set period of time to give that share back.
So, when he receives the shares, say 1,000,000 he sells them to realise the money but it is shares he owes not money. When his position closes he has to return the shares.
Hopefully, over the agreed period, the share price has fallen and our trader simply buys the number of shares he owes and hands them back, pocketing the difference.
Now, in the case of GameStop the price has been driven up hugely, $450, and in order to cover his position our trader needs to find 450,000,000 to but the shares he owes.
In order to do this our trader now has to go to his boss, explain how fu**ed they are and liquidate other assets to raise the funds.
These other assets will have downward pressures on other stock prices that safer institutions, pension pots, will hold.
So, yes it will have an effect on pensions...
...but since the boomers pulled the ladder up after them and most of these nerds don't have pensions then they really don't care.
Karma.