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The Time Warner Cable Headquarters at Columbus Circle in the Manhattan borough of New York City, May 26.Mike Segar/Reuters

The media under Donald Trump: fake, dishonest -- and on fire.

At least in the stock market, where purveyors of newspapers, cable television and websites are some of the best performers in a broad market rally that itself is already front-page news. Deal making and speculation that the new president will dismantle regulation is blotting out the group's bad press -- among investors, anyway. Even short sellers are evacuating.

The S&P 500 Media Index has surged 17 per cent since Nov. 8, the fourth-best return out of 24 industries, while short interest on an exchange-traded fund tracking the stocks sits at the lowest since September 2015, IHS Markit Ltd. data show. Many of the best-performing individual stocks, such as Tegna Inc. and Scripps Networks Interactive Inc. -- both up more than 20 per cent -- have seen bears retreat.

Quiz: What is 'fake news,' and how can you spot it? Try our quiz

Media bulls got good news Wednesday when newly designated FCC Chairman and net neutrality opponent Ajit Pai said in Senate testimony that approval of the pending merger between Time Warner Inc. and AT&T Inc. probably falls outside his jurisdiction. This lines up with Mr. Pai's previous call for "light-touch regulation," just one part of a rollback investors see spurring further industry consolidation.

"The biggest driver in the media rally since the election has been greater regulatory openness to value creation though potential M&A," Paul Gallant, a Washington-based analyst at Cowen & Co., said in a phone interview.

The S&P 500 Media Index rose 0.5 per cent at 1:03 p.m. in New York.

Companies regulated by the FCC share investor enthusiasm for Mr. Pai's nomination. AT&T said Pai already has worked to remove "outdated and unnecessary regulations," while Charter Communications Inc. said he "understands that regulatory stability allows businesses to grow and create jobs."

Mr. Pai, who has been on the commission since 2012 and the agency's chairman since being designated by Trump in January, has also spoken out against TV station ownership restrictions and privacy requirements for broadband providers. He's criticized the net-neutrality rules adopted by Democrats in 2015, already suspending a requirement that internet service providers safeguard customers' data.

While a primary driver of the post-election rally has been optimism that the FCC may ease rules, Wells Fargo analyst Marci Ryvicker has also previously cited the potential for higher advertising spending amid expectations of lower taxes and health-care costs under Trump.

Further, some stocks in the media index are rallying off recent weakness. Walt Disney Co. was at an eight-month low in the weeks before the election, while 21st Century Fox Inc. sat at a more than 3 1/2-year low two months ahead of Nov. 8. Both companies have rebounded at least 10 per cent since the vote.

Here's a summary of the lack of short interest in media shares:

SI on the PowerShares Dynamic Media Portfolio fell to 0.19 per cent of shares outstanding on Feb. 28, the lowest since Sept. 11, 2015

SI on Tegna at 1.96 per cent of shares outstanding, the lowest since July 21, 2015; stock has surged 38 per cent since the election, the most in the S&P 500 Media Index

SI on Viacom at 0.15 per cent of shares outstanding, the lowest since June 5, 2015; stock has rallied 16 per cent since the election

SI on Scripps Networks decreased to 5.93 per cent of shares outstanding on March 3, the lowest since Nov. 20, 2014; stock has climbed 21 per cent since the election

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