Cornered: The Complete History of the Most Dangerous Trade in Financial Markets | Capital Street FX
CORNERED
The complete history of the most dangerous trade in financial markets — from 600 BC to GameStop, Harshad Mehta, and the five markets being cornered right now
The Night Someone Invented the Corner
Isaac Le Maire built the Dutch East India Company with his own hands. Then the company threw him off its board. Tonight, alone in a counting house in Amsterdam, he is going to invent short selling — not for profit, but for revenge.
Outside his window, ships bearing the VOC insignia sail for the Spice Islands. They carry cargo financed with his capital. He cannot trade the routes he built. He cannot collect the dividends he is owed. He has been erased from an empire he created. So he is going to destroy it. He forms a secret syndicate of eight merchants, sells forward contracts on VOC shares he does not own, and spreads rumours of shipping disasters through Amsterdam’s trading community. It is the first recorded short corner in history. The Dutch government responds with the world’s first securities regulation — a short selling ban — within a year. Le Maire dies having lost 1.5 million guilders. His gravestone says he kept his honour.
That is the template. The instrument changes every generation. The template never does.
“A wise old broker told me that all the big operators had one ambition — and that was to work a corner. It was more than the prospective money profit. It was the vanity complex asserting itself among cold-blooded operators.”Edwin Lefèvre — Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, 1923
What is a corner, precisely? A corner occurs when one entity acquires sufficient control over the supply of a tradable asset that they can dictate the price to anyone who must buy or sell it. The classical corner accumulates the long side — buy everything, trap the shorts. The bear corner accumulates the short side — sell everything, trap the longs. Both are the same trade in opposite directions. Both end the same way.
The Anatomy of a Corner
Every corner in 2,600 years of financial history has followed the same three-phase structure — and broken by one of the same four mechanisms. The asset changes. The arithmetic does not.
Every Corner in History — The Grand Timeline
Long corners above the line. Bear corners below. Scroll right for the full history. India’s corners highlighted in orange.
Five Stories That Defined the Trade
Click any card to expand the full story.
Note: India corners show single-stock moves within the broader market manipulation. Soros bear corners not shown as they measured government reserve depletion, not price appreciation.
Jay Gould understood one thing about the gold market that nobody else had fully exploited: it had a single fatal vulnerability. The US Treasury held enormous gold reserves at Fort Knox. Any speculator who cornered the gold market could be instantly broken by the President ordering the Treasury to sell. So Gould’s plan was not just to buy gold — it was to neutralise the President first.
Through Abel Corbin — President Grant’s brother-in-law — Gould secured what he believed was a commitment that the Treasury would keep its gold off the market. He bribed the assistant US Treasurer with a $1.5 million stake in the scheme. Through disguised brokers he accumulated $50 million in gold contracts, driving the price from $132 to $162. On the floor of the Gold Room, traders were physically fighting as the price ran.
Then Grant discovered the scheme. He ordered the Treasury to sell $4 million in gold. The price collapsed within minutes. Dozens of brokers failed. Gould had secretly sold before the announcement. He escaped prosecution through Tammany Hall judges. The lesson: a corner that requires neutralising the government is a corner with a fatal single point of failure.
Nelson Bunker Hunt, William Herbert Hunt, and Lamar Hunt were the sons of H.L. Hunt — a Texas oil billionaire so wealthy he required a staff of accountants simply to calculate what he owned. After Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, the Hunts believed paper currencies were fundamentally worthless. Silver was the hedge. They began accumulating in 1973 and never stopped.
By 1979, they and their Saudi partners had accumulated approximately 200 million ounces — one-third of the world’s total tradable silver supply. The price ran from $6.80 to $49.45 in less than a year. At its peak, their position was worth $10 billion on paper. Tiffany’s took out a full-page ad in the New York Times condemning them.
On January 7, 1980, COMEX introduced Silver Rule 7 — restricting new leveraged silver purchases — while the Federal Reserve pressured banks to stop lending to speculators. With financing cut off, the Hunts could not maintain their margin. Silver Thursday arrived on March 27, 1980: the price plunged from $49 to $10.80 in weeks. The Hunts defaulted on a $100 million margin call. Both eventually declared bankruptcy. In 1988 they were convicted and ordered to pay $134 million in damages. The corner that changed commodity market regulation forever.
A bear corner does not accumulate supply. It accumulates an obligation. The Bank of England had committed to defending the pound within the European Exchange Rate Mechanism at a rate that required interest rates too high for Britain’s weakening economy. Soros identified this as a trap: the government had finite reserves, a mandatory commitment to defend the rate, and an economy that made that defence economically suicidal. He needed enough capital to exhaust those reserves.
Stanley Druckenmiller, Soros’s lead portfolio manager, told Soros he wanted to short 100% of the fund. Soros told him to do 200% — it was a once-in-a-generation opportunity. On the morning of September 16, 1992, Soros increased his short position from $1.5 billion to $10 billion, borrowing and selling pounds from anyone who would deal with him. Other hedge funds joined behind him. The Bank of England bought £300 million twice before 8:30am alone, then continued purchasing billions more. By noon, interest rates had been raised to 12%, then 15%.
Nothing worked. At 7:30pm, Chancellor Norman Lamont announced Britain’s withdrawal from the ERM. The pound fell 15% against the deutschmark. Soros’s Quantum Fund went from $15 billion to $19 billion overnight — roughly $1 billion in profit in a single day. The lesson: a government commitment backed by finite reserves is a corner waiting to be sprung.
Porsche had been quietly accumulating Volkswagen shares and cash-settled call options for three years, publicly claiming it held approximately 31% of VW. It actually controlled 74%. Hedge funds had shorted VW heavily — the stock looked overvalued in the depths of the 2008 financial crisis, and the automotive sector was being destroyed by the downturn. The short thesis was rational. The information was wrong.
On Sunday October 26, 2008, Porsche revealed its true position. The available float collapsed to approximately 1% of outstanding shares. The short sellers held 12%. The arithmetic was mathematically impossible: there was not enough VW stock in the world to cover the short positions. VW stock hit €1,005 per share — briefly making it the world’s most valuable company, worth more than ExxonMobil. Hedge funds lost billions trying to cover at any available price.
The corner ultimately failed. Porsche had financed the accumulation with enormous debt, and the 2008 credit crisis made that debt unsustainable. Porsche’s CEO and CFO resigned. Rather than Porsche absorbing Volkswagen as intended, Volkswagen absorbed Porsche. The cornerer became the cornered.
The template was 98 years old. In 1923, Clarence Saunders — a Southern businessman with no Wall Street connections — identified that short sellers had targeted his Piggly Wiggly grocery chain. He borrowed tens of millions, accumulated 99% of the outstanding shares, and called for delivery. The NYSE Governing Committee, packed with Wall Street insiders, changed the rules and gave the short sellers five extra days to find shares. Saunders lost everything. He called the exchange “the worst menace in America.”
GameStop was Piggly Wiggly at internet scale. Reddit’s WallStreetBets forum identified that GameStop’s short interest exceeded 100% of the float — more shares had been sold short than existed. The community bought. The stock rose from $20 to $483 in three weeks. Melvin Capital, the primary short, lost billions. The mathematics of the corner were working precisely as designed.
Then Robinhood restricted buying. The 21st-century exchange equivalent of the NYSE’s 1923 rule change. Retail buyers could not add to positions. The squeeze lost its fuel. The stock collapsed. Congress held hearings. The SEC investigated. Nobody went to jail. Melvin Capital eventually closed. The pattern — retail coordination traps institutional shorts, platform restricts buying to protect the institution, retail investor loses — was a precise replay of exactly one century earlier. The playbook never changes. Only the medium does.
The Two Men Who Cornered an Economy
A mentor and his student. Two men from the same city, the same street, the same world — separated by a decade and a method. Together, in 2026 stock market equivalent terms, they cost Indian investors approximately $170 billion.
Harshad Mehta — The Bank Receipt Weapon
India in 1991 was opening its economy for the first time. Mehta — a stockbroker who had arrived in Mumbai with ₹40 in his pocket — had spent a decade learning the plumbing of India’s financial system until he understood it better than the people who ran it. He found his weapon in a gap between the banking system and the stock market that regulators hadn’t thought to close.
Ketan Parekh — The Student Goes Further
Parekh had worked in Mehta’s firm. He drew a different lesson: Mehta had been too visible, too dependent on one mechanism. Parekh would be subtle. He waited for the dotcom boom, selected ten technology and media stocks (the K-10), and used circular trading — buying and selling the same stocks between his own entities to create the illusion of massive demand — combined with funds from the very companies whose stocks he was inflating.
| Metric | Harshad Mehta 1992 | Ketan Parekh 2001 |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Fake Bank Receipts — cornered the trust infrastructure of the entire banking system | Circular trading + company-funded self-inflation — cornered the market’s belief in a single operator |
| Total fraud (INR) | ₹4,025 crore | ₹40,000 crore |
| Total fraud (USD at time) | $1.55 billion | $9.3 billion |
| Sensex multiplier to 2026 | 16.7× (Sensex 4,500 → 75,000) | 15× (Sensex 5,000 → 75,000) |
| Fraud in 2026 market terms | ~$26 billion | ~$140 billion |
| Single stock peak move | ACC: ₹200 → ₹9,000 (+4,400%) | Zee: ₹127 → ₹10,000 (+7,774%) |
| Market index impact | Sensex +309% (1,100→4,500) in 13 months | K-10 stocks avg +500–2,000%+ |
| How it broke | Journalist Sucheta Dalal, Times of India, April 23, 1992 | Rival bear cartel + leverage collapse + Bank of India default |
| Regulatory legacy | SEBI empowered · NSE created · Electronic trading · Demat shares | Badla system abolished · T+2 settlement · Cross-market surveillance |
| Teacher / Student | Teacher — Parekh worked in his firm | Student — learned directly from Mehta’s methods |
The Bear Corner — When the Short Seller Is the Cornerer
The bear corner is the same trade in the opposite direction. Instead of owning the supply, the bear cornerer owns the obligation. They find a counterparty with a mandatory commitment to buy — and sell to them until the commitment is exhausted.
“When I told Soros I wanted to short 100% of the fund in sterling, he looked at me with great disdain. He thought the story was good enough that I should be doing 200% — it was a once-in-a-generation opportunity.”Stanley Druckenmiller — on Black Wednesday, 1992
Five Markets Being Cornered Right Now
These are not theoretical. The data is live, the positions are building, and the conditions for each corner are measurable today.
| Market | Concentrated Supply |
High Delivery Obligation |
Thin Market vs Capital |
No Physical Substitute |
Regulatory Blind Spot |
Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silver (COMEX) | ● | ● | ● | ● | ◐ | CRITICAL |
| Gold (Sovereign) | ● | ◐ | ○ | ● | ● | HIGH |
| Bitcoin / MSTR | ◐ | ● | ● | ● | ● | HIGH |
| Small-Cap Biotech | ○ | ● | ● | ● | ◐ | MODERATE |
| US Treasuries | ○ | ◐ | ○ | ◐ | ○ | SYSTEMIC |
The Hunt Brothers 1980 template with an industrial demand floor that didn’t exist then. Silver has run a supply deficit for five consecutive years. The four-year cumulative shortfall reached 678 million ounces — 10 months of annual mining supply. Against 576 million ounces of paper open interest sits only 76 million ounces of registered deliverable physical metal. 5 paper claims for every 1 physical bar.
This is not a hedge fund corner. It is a sovereign corner building in slow motion. China and India are systematically withdrawing physical gold from the Western paper system — COMEX and LBMA — through actual delivery demands. The Shanghai Gold Exchange requires physical delivery on 90%+ of contracts. COMEX settles physically on less than 1%. When enough physical gold moves East, the paper system’s delivery guarantee becomes theoretical.
Strategy raised $25.3B in 2025 — largest US equity issuer two consecutive years — to buy Bitcoin continuously. Every purchase tightens the free float while increasing MSTR’s short interest. A dual squeeze: Bitcoin supply tightens, MSTR shorts must cover, MSTR equity recovers, Strategy issues more equity, buys more Bitcoin. The mechanism that breaks it: Bitcoin falls, premium collapses, Strategy becomes the largest forced seller.
No single cornerer. The most reliably repeatable corner structure in modern markets. A biotech with one pipeline drug, 10–20M share float, 40–80% short interest, binary FDA catalyst approaching. When the trial succeeds, every short covers simultaneously in a market where there are physically not enough shares. The price doubles, triples, or goes 10x in a single session. This happens in multiple names every earnings cycle.
Paul Mozer at Salomon Brothers captured 94% of a single Treasury auction in 1991, squeezing the when-issued market. The rules changed. But the repo market mechanism — where concentrated ownership of a specific maturity can force special repo rates deeply negative — still exists. A large enough concentrated position in an on-the-run Treasury maturity creates the same delivery trap as any commodity corner. Not accessible to retail. The one that keeps the Fed’s repo desk operational at all times.
Every Corner Made a Rule
The regulator always arrives one cycle late. The next corner will exploit the gap at the bottom of this table.
How to Trade a Corner
Three scenarios. Three different entry logics. One rule that applies to all of them: the exit discipline is the entire trade.
Five signals that a corner is forming or already in progress. When all five coexist in a single market, the structural conditions are in place. Timing is still uncertain — but the arithmetic is not.
Trading the long side of a forming corner means positioning before the squeeze triggers. The risk: timing. The Hunt Brothers and Porsche were right about the corner and still lost because their leverage failed before the ransom was collected.
Every corner in 2,600 years has broken. The counter-trade — short after the corner peaks — is historically the most consistent trade in corner history. The peak is almost always marked by a regulatory or government announcement.
The Trade Is Always The Same
From Thales cornering olive presses in 600 BC to Strategy Inc holding 818,000 Bitcoin in 2026, every corner in history has followed the same arc. Accumulate quietly. Spring the trap. Name the price. Then watch the rules change, the government intervene, the leverage fail, or new supply arrive. One always happens first. The cornerer’s only job is to be right before any of them do.
The next corner is being built right now. COMEX silver’s registered coverage ratio sits at 13.4% — below the stress threshold that exchange analysts flag. The PBOC has been buying gold for 16 consecutive months. Strategy holds 818,334 Bitcoin against a shrinking free float. The biotech pipeline in 2026 is the most active in history for binary FDA decisions. The question is not whether someone is building a corner. The question is which one breaks first.
“Markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent — but cornered markets cannot stay cornered longer than the regulator can change the rules or the cornerer can service the debt. One always happens first. The cornerer’s only job is to be right before either arrives.”Capital Street FX Research · May 2026