Managing editor of Clusterstock.com and former editor-in-chief
of Dealbreaker.com John Carney was
fired by Business Insider's Henry Blodget yesterday.
There is no official word on the reason for his termination.
Two weeks prior, Carney had written an article stating that
retailer GameStop Corp [NYSE:GME] "might
be an acquisition target," according to "rumors". The
article started off with, "When the rumor began circulating this
week," and included a link directed to an article that was written
by his colleague that same day, not earlier in the week.
Carney and his writing partner Vince Veneziani persisted with the
unsubstantiated rumor, by suggesting that GameStop's Merger and
Acquisition lawyers appeared to be preparing for a GameStop
buyout. GameStop stock rose dramatically as a result.
According to his biography, Carney believes that insider trading
should be legal (he apparently also believes that spreading false
rumors should be a-ok). On the subject of naked short
selling, where short sellers bet down stock without borrowing any
stock, he has actually
defended the practice, stating "cracking down on naked short
selling would damage shareholders by making the markets less
efficient and penalizing the best corporate watchdogs around."
The firing may not have anything to do with spreading rumors or
believing that unethical practices should be legal, but
nevertheless, it may be a sign that Business Insider is attempting
to move back into the world of journalism and away from dangerous
false rumor spreading outfits such as dealreporter.com,
flyonthewall.com and writers like John Carney.