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fyi mick and i have created a new board for tracking short interest......
we will be focusing on both aspects t/a and fundamental.....
please stop by,boardmark it and pass along the link.....
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/board.asp?board_id=9533
-------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------
after yesterdays landmark win for the public trader its time to find and capitolize on shorts.....
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=20436967
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=20453945
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=20454047
fyi mick and i have created a new board for tracking short interest......
we will be focusing on both aspects t/a and fundamental.....
please stop by,boardmark it and pass along the link.....
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/board.asp?board_id=9533
-------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------
after yesterdays landmark win for the public trader its time to find and capitolize on shorts.....
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=20436967
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=20453945
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=20454047
indeed , taking advantage of opportunity is key..
trading isnt gambling its taking educated risks......
well your in good company then....
he might be a good one to pick on he does get pretty excited....
rotflmao...;) just kidding dave...
lol dave is a good sport....rotf
lol rotf......no kool-aide
pointing out that no broker in thier right mind would restrict online buyers when they are selling stock for a company or a cd holder is hardly off topic either......
so talking about the short interest of this stock is off topic.....?!?!?!?
really ...?!?!??!!
PEDG annotated daily chart
PEDG annotated daily chart
indeed the good ole double talk.......
http://www.forbes.com/home/wallstreet/2007/06/13/sec-cox-options-biz-wall-cx_lm_0613rules.html
Trading Rule Reprieve
Liz Moyer, 06.13.07, 4:56 PM ET
Wall Street got a reprieve from more restrictive trading rules
Wednesday
as the Securities and Exchange Commission voted to put off any decision
on whether to take away certain exemptions for options market makers.
But the SEC did eliminate a controversial "grandfather" rule that many
critics have said allowed rogue traders to manipulate certain stocks
through naked short sales. It also eliminated the prohibition on
selling
short on a downward tick in price.
At a hearing Wednesday on proposed amendments to a 2004 regulation on
short sales, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said the tightened rules "are
aimed squarely at abusive short selling and market manipulation and
promoting fair, efficient and orderly markets."
The SEC has been considering amendments to its 2004 Regulation SHO to
close loopholes that encourage manipulation, but the proposed
amendments
have not been without controversy.
More than 900 letters poured into the agency since July from a wide
assortment of commentators, including broker/dealers, hedge fund
managers, ordinary investors and state securities regulators. One vocal
critic of the rules is Overstock.com (nasdaq: OSTK - news - people )
Chief Executive Patrick Byrne, who has been waging a self-described
"crusade" to stamp out abuses on Wall Street.
"This is an encouraging development and the SEC is to be commended for
taking this step," Byrne said in an e-mail Wednesday.
The grandfather exemption, repealed by a unanimous vote Wednesday
though
the date for implementation has yet to be set, made an exception to the
2004 Regulation SHO that hard-to-borrow securities sold short had to be
delivered within 13 days of the settlement date. Reg SHO exempted trade
failures that existed before the rule was implemented in January 2005,
and it exempted failures that occured in a five-day window before a
stock is added to threshold lists kept by the major stock exchanges.
Those exemptions are now eliminated though the close-out requirement
was
reset to 35 days from 13, giving short sellers more time to find shares
to cover their open positions.
Cox has said Reg SHO helped reduce trade delivery failures, but hasn't
been as effective as hoped, as evidenced by stocks that have languished
on the threshold lists for months and years. (Overstock.com, for
example, has been on Nasdaq's threshold list for over 500 days.)
These longstanding delivery failures are linked to the grandfather
exemption for trades and by the options market maker exemption, which
allows an options market maker to maintain an open short position to
hedge his options position. High and persistent trade delivery failures
can be a sign of deliberate naked short selling, "and that can be used
as a tool to drive down a company's share price," Cox said.
The grandfather exemption was put in the 2004 regulation out of
concerns
that forcing the close out in hard-to-borrow stocks would lead to a
short squeeze--a trading term to describe what happens to short sellers
when a stock rises instead of the hoped-for decline, and the short
seller has to cover by buying more expensive shares.
But the SEC commissioners acknowledged Wednesday that concerns about
extra volatility and short-squeezes were overblown and that the
benefits
of eliminating the grandfather exemption outweighed the downside.
Also part of the changes proposed Wednesday was a plan to publish
two-month delayed trade delivery failure data on individual stocks that
appear on the threshold lists. That data comes from the Depositary
Trust
Co. The SEC is also going to increase the frequency of short-interest
reporting to twice a month from once a month. That change is slated to
go into effect by September.
But the matter of the exemption for options market makers is left open
for now, something that is bound to cause consternation for those who
wanted all the loopholes shut. The SEC will open a new comment period
on
amendments to market maker rules.
"We look forward to a comparable reform closing the market maker
exemption loophole, which is currently an avenue of great abuse," said
Overstock's Byrne. "There is a bank being robbed in two ways: some
crooks snatch a teller's cash drawer and sprint out the front, some
saunter in the back door and loot the vault. What the SEC did today was
put bars up in the tellers' windows. I applaud that. But tomorrow there
will be twice as many crooks going around back."
indeed ......could be a major turning point...
http://www.forbes.com/home/wallstreet/2007/06/13/sec-cox-options-biz-wall-cx_lm_0613rules.html
Trading Rule Reprieve
Liz Moyer, 06.13.07, 4:56 PM ET
Wall Street got a reprieve from more restrictive trading rules
Wednesday
as the Securities and Exchange Commission voted to put off any decision
on whether to take away certain exemptions for options market makers.
But the SEC did eliminate a controversial "grandfather" rule that many
critics have said allowed rogue traders to manipulate certain stocks
through naked short sales. It also eliminated the prohibition on
selling
short on a downward tick in price.
At a hearing Wednesday on proposed amendments to a 2004 regulation on
short sales, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said the tightened rules "are
aimed squarely at abusive short selling and market manipulation and
promoting fair, efficient and orderly markets."
The SEC has been considering amendments to its 2004 Regulation SHO to
close loopholes that encourage manipulation, but the proposed
amendments
have not been without controversy.
More than 900 letters poured into the agency since July from a wide
assortment of commentators, including broker/dealers, hedge fund
managers, ordinary investors and state securities regulators. One vocal
critic of the rules is Overstock.com (nasdaq: OSTK - news - people )
Chief Executive Patrick Byrne, who has been waging a self-described
"crusade" to stamp out abuses on Wall Street.
"This is an encouraging development and the SEC is to be commended for
taking this step," Byrne said in an e-mail Wednesday.
The grandfather exemption, repealed by a unanimous vote Wednesday
though
the date for implementation has yet to be set, made an exception to the
2004 Regulation SHO that hard-to-borrow securities sold short had to be
delivered within 13 days of the settlement date. Reg SHO exempted trade
failures that existed before the rule was implemented in January 2005,
and it exempted failures that occured in a five-day window before a
stock is added to threshold lists kept by the major stock exchanges.
Those exemptions are now eliminated though the close-out requirement
was
reset to 35 days from 13, giving short sellers more time to find shares
to cover their open positions.
Cox has said Reg SHO helped reduce trade delivery failures, but hasn't
been as effective as hoped, as evidenced by stocks that have languished
on the threshold lists for months and years. (Overstock.com, for
example, has been on Nasdaq's threshold list for over 500 days.)
These longstanding delivery failures are linked to the grandfather
exemption for trades and by the options market maker exemption, which
allows an options market maker to maintain an open short position to
hedge his options position. High and persistent trade delivery failures
can be a sign of deliberate naked short selling, "and that can be used
as a tool to drive down a company's share price," Cox said.
The grandfather exemption was put in the 2004 regulation out of
concerns
that forcing the close out in hard-to-borrow stocks would lead to a
short squeeze--a trading term to describe what happens to short sellers
when a stock rises instead of the hoped-for decline, and the short
seller has to cover by buying more expensive shares.
But the SEC commissioners acknowledged Wednesday that concerns about
extra volatility and short-squeezes were overblown and that the
benefits
of eliminating the grandfather exemption outweighed the downside.
Also part of the changes proposed Wednesday was a plan to publish
two-month delayed trade delivery failure data on individual stocks that
appear on the threshold lists. That data comes from the Depositary
Trust
Co. The SEC is also going to increase the frequency of short-interest
reporting to twice a month from once a month. That change is slated to
go into effect by September.
But the matter of the exemption for options market makers is left open
for now, something that is bound to cause consternation for those who
wanted all the loopholes shut. The SEC will open a new comment period
on
amendments to market maker rules.
"We look forward to a comparable reform closing the market maker
exemption loophole, which is currently an avenue of great abuse," said
Overstock's Byrne. "There is a bank being robbed in two ways: some
crooks snatch a teller's cash drawer and sprint out the front, some
saunter in the back door and loot the vault. What the SEC did today was
put bars up in the tellers' windows. I applaud that. But tomorrow there
will be twice as many crooks going around back."
2nd UPDATE: SEC Approves Changes To Short-Selling RulesLast update:
6/13/2007 2:02:15 PM(Updates throughout with additional details on rule
changes, quotes from SEC commissioners, notes votes were unanimous.)
By Judith Burns
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The Securities and Exchange Commission voted
Wednesday to abolish longstanding rules that restrict short sales in
declining markets and approved another change to tighten rules intended
to curb manipulative short sales, including so-called "naked" short
sales.
The first change, approved in a 5-0 vote, ends decades-long
restrictions
by the SEC and U.S. markets on selling short as prices are falling. An
experiment in lifting the rules for select stocks showed there was
little justification for retaining restrictions such as the New York
Stock Exchange's "tick" test, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said.
Elimination of SEC's short-sale price restrictions and rules barring
markets from using a "tick" or "bid" test to control short sales will
take effect immediately after the rule change is published in the
Federal Register, SEC staffers said.
Barriers to short sales when prices are moving lower date from the
1930s, when regulators sought to prevent "bear" raids that could send
prices spiraling downward. The advent of decimal trading has made it
harder to comply with such restrictions, and with better market
surveillance, "we've determined that the rule simply is not needed,"
said SEC Commissioner Paul Atkins.
A second change approved by the SEC modifies Regulation SHO, which the
agency adopted in 2004 to curb abusive short sales. The SEC voted
unanimously Wednesday to eliminate a controversial exception to the
2004
rule that shielded existing short positions from a Regulation SHO
requirement to deliver hard-to-borrow shares within 13 days of
settlement. Once the change takes effect, short positions previously
protected by the grandfather clause must be closed out within 35 days.
Short selling involves sales of borrowed securities, producing profits
when prices decline. The practice is legal, but the SEC's Regulation
SHO
sought to prevent "naked" short sales, in which short sellers don't
borrow securities they sell. Among other things, the SEC regulation,
which took effect in 2005, imposed new deadlines on closing out short
positions by delivering borrowed shares. SEC officials said delivery
failures have declined about 35% overall since Regulation SHO took
effect and have fallen about 53% for hard-to-borrow stocks defined as
"threshold" securities.
Longstanding, persistent delivery failures seem to be due to the
grandfather protections and a shield for short positions held by option
market makers, Cox said. He said delivery failures hurt investors and
companies, and may be a sign of naked short selling. "It continues to
be
a problem, particularly in the microcap space," Cox told reporters
after
the SEC meeting. SEC Commissioner Annette Nazareth said ending the
grandfather protections won't have adverse effects, such as volatile
trading, that prompted the SEC to adopt the shield in 2004.
SEC Commissioner Kathleen Casey also endorsed the change, saying the
benefit of doing so more than offsets concerns that a "squeeze" on
outstanding short positions might roil stock markets. To shed light on
delivery failures, the SEC plans to make aggregateDepository Trust Co.
data available on the SEC Web site shortly, after removing certain
confidential information from the data feed already supplied to
regulators by the DTC.
Agency staffers said providing hard data on delivery failures may
reduce
the number of requests the SEC has received for such data under the
Freedom of Information Act.
The SEC abandoned earlier plans to narrow protections for option market
makers and voted Wednesday to seek comment on eliminating the exception
altogether, or adopting an alternative approach. One alternative would
set a 35-day delivery requirement on failures resulting from short
sales
to hedge option series established by an options market maker before a
stock is designated as a threshold security. A second would set the
delivery deadline at 35 days or 13 days after the expiration of all
options series in a portfolio, whichever is earlier.
Additionally, the SEC adopted a requirement for brokers marking a sale
as an outright "long" sale to document the location of the shares being
sold. The SEC also modified an exception from short-selling
restrictions
for unwinding net short index-arbitrage positions, available provided
the market hasn't declined by 2% or more from the prior day's close,
based on a market index.
The SEC voted to substitute the New York Composite Index for the Dow
Jones Industrial Average as the applicable market-decline index. In a
last-minute change, the SEC deferred action on a fourth rule that would
have tightened short sales in connection with public offerings, but Cox
said it plans to take up the matter shortly, perhaps later this month.
-By Judith Burns, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6692;
Judith.Burns@dowjones.com (END) Dow Jones Newswires
2nd UPDATE: SEC Approves Changes To Short-Selling RulesLast update:
6/13/2007 2:02:15 PM(Updates throughout with additional details on rule
changes, quotes from SEC commissioners, notes votes were unanimous.)
By Judith Burns
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The Securities and Exchange Commission voted
Wednesday to abolish longstanding rules that restrict short sales in
declining markets and approved another change to tighten rules intended
to curb manipulative short sales, including so-called "naked" short
sales.
The first change, approved in a 5-0 vote, ends decades-long
restrictions
by the SEC and U.S. markets on selling short as prices are falling. An
experiment in lifting the rules for select stocks showed there was
little justification for retaining restrictions such as the New York
Stock Exchange's "tick" test, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said.
Elimination of SEC's short-sale price restrictions and rules barring
markets from using a "tick" or "bid" test to control short sales will
take effect immediately after the rule change is published in the
Federal Register, SEC staffers said.
Barriers to short sales when prices are moving lower date from the
1930s, when regulators sought to prevent "bear" raids that could send
prices spiraling downward. The advent of decimal trading has made it
harder to comply with such restrictions, and with better market
surveillance, "we've determined that the rule simply is not needed,"
said SEC Commissioner Paul Atkins.
A second change approved by the SEC modifies Regulation SHO, which the
agency adopted in 2004 to curb abusive short sales. The SEC voted
unanimously Wednesday to eliminate a controversial exception to the
2004
rule that shielded existing short positions from a Regulation SHO
requirement to deliver hard-to-borrow shares within 13 days of
settlement. Once the change takes effect, short positions previously
protected by the grandfather clause must be closed out within 35 days.
Short selling involves sales of borrowed securities, producing profits
when prices decline. The practice is legal, but the SEC's Regulation
SHO
sought to prevent "naked" short sales, in which short sellers don't
borrow securities they sell. Among other things, the SEC regulation,
which took effect in 2005, imposed new deadlines on closing out short
positions by delivering borrowed shares. SEC officials said delivery
failures have declined about 35% overall since Regulation SHO took
effect and have fallen about 53% for hard-to-borrow stocks defined as
"threshold" securities.
Longstanding, persistent delivery failures seem to be due to the
grandfather protections and a shield for short positions held by option
market makers, Cox said. He said delivery failures hurt investors and
companies, and may be a sign of naked short selling. "It continues to
be
a problem, particularly in the microcap space," Cox told reporters
after
the SEC meeting. SEC Commissioner Annette Nazareth said ending the
grandfather protections won't have adverse effects, such as volatile
trading, that prompted the SEC to adopt the shield in 2004.
SEC Commissioner Kathleen Casey also endorsed the change, saying the
benefit of doing so more than offsets concerns that a "squeeze" on
outstanding short positions might roil stock markets. To shed light on
delivery failures, the SEC plans to make aggregateDepository Trust Co.
data available on the SEC Web site shortly, after removing certain
confidential information from the data feed already supplied to
regulators by the DTC.
Agency staffers said providing hard data on delivery failures may
reduce
the number of requests the SEC has received for such data under the
Freedom of Information Act.
The SEC abandoned earlier plans to narrow protections for option market
makers and voted Wednesday to seek comment on eliminating the exception
altogether, or adopting an alternative approach. One alternative would
set a 35-day delivery requirement on failures resulting from short
sales
to hedge option series established by an options market maker before a
stock is designated as a threshold security. A second would set the
delivery deadline at 35 days or 13 days after the expiration of all
options series in a portfolio, whichever is earlier.
Additionally, the SEC adopted a requirement for brokers marking a sale
as an outright "long" sale to document the location of the shares being
sold. The SEC also modified an exception from short-selling
restrictions
for unwinding net short index-arbitrage positions, available provided
the market hasn't declined by 2% or more from the prior day's close,
based on a market index.
The SEC voted to substitute the New York Composite Index for the Dow
Jones Industrial Average as the applicable market-decline index. In a
last-minute change, the SEC deferred action on a fourth rule that would
have tightened short sales in connection with public offerings, but Cox
said it plans to take up the matter shortly, perhaps later this month.
-By Judith Burns, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6692;
Judith.Burns@dowjones.com (END) Dow Jones Newswires
did you notice though shorts now have 30+ days to cover short positions....?
i think the grand father clause being dropped is a major step forward but then they left the backdoor open for them to cover.....
a friend of a friend has an psuedo-inside source on the legislation bill from yesterday......
they were making a huge issue of that ,they even went to a law from england in the 1700,s for this bill....
that law states no transaction would be honored without certificates in hands....
imo this should increase run percentages in a major way......
no more never ending supply to play with anymore which should make the supply and demand aspects really shine.....the way they were meant to......
wouldnt it be nice if stocks shot up like the price of an elmo doll at christmas......:))
which im sure will put the DTCC in a crunch ...
thats where i think we see the difference....
now remember the dtcc and president bush both want to do away with paper certificates....
i see a few loopholes as well.....
BUT !
market makers will now have to show where the shares they allowed to be shorted came from... :D
from my understanding it covers all markets.......
Issue 2007-113 June 13, 2007
COMMISSION ANNOUNCEMENTS
SEC VOTES ON REGULATION SHO AMENDMENTS AND PROPOSALS; ALSO VOTES TO
ELIMINATE "TICK" TEST
The Securities and Exchange Commission today voted to take additional
steps to better safeguard investors and protect the integrity of the
markets during short selling transactions by closing loopholes in
Regulation SHO and further reducing persistent failures to deliver
stock by the end of the standard three-day settlement period for
trades.
Erik Sirri, Director of the SEC's Division of Market Regulation, said,
"Today the Commission voted on steps to streamline and tighten short
selling provisions so that markets and investors are better served by
our rules."
1. Final Amendments to Rules 200 and 203 of Regulation SHO
The Securities and Exchange Commission voted to adopt final amendments
to Rules 200 and 203 of Regulation SHO (17 CFR 242.200 and 242.203).
The amendments will further reduce fails to deliver in certain equity
securities by eliminating the grandfather provision. The amendments
also modify the close-out requirement for fails to deliver resulting
from sales of threshold securities pursuant to Rule 144 of the
Securities Act of 1933 (Securities Act). In addition, the amendments
update the market decline limitation referenced in Regulation SHO. The
amendments will be effective 60 days from the date of publication of
the amendments in the Federal Register.
Regulation SHO, which became fully effective in January 2005, provides
a regulatory framework governing short sales of securities and, among
other things, includes the following:
* A definition of ownership for short sale purposes and a requirement
to determine a short seller's net aggregate position.
* A locate requirement, which requires that before accepting or
effecting a short sale order, brokers and dealers must (i) borrow
securities, (ii) make arrangements to borrow securities, or (iii) have
a reasonable basis to believe that securities can be borrowed in order
to make timely delivery.
"* Additional delivery or close-out requirements on designated
"threshold securities." A threshold security means an equity security
registered or required to file reports with the Commission for which
there is an aggregate fail to deliver position for five consecutive
settlement days at a registered clearing agency of 10,000 shares or
more and that is equal to at least 0.5% of the issue's total shares
outstanding. Where a clearing agency participant has a fail to deliver
position in threshold securities that persists for 13 consecutive
settlement days, the participant must take action to close out the
position. Until the position is closed out, the participant, and any
broker-dealer for which it clears transactions, including market
makers, may not effect further short sales in the particular threshold
security without borrowing or entering into a bona fide arrangement to
borrow the security.
* A grandfather provision that provides that the requirement to close-
out fail to deliver positions in threshold securities that remain for
13 consecutive settlement days does not apply to positions that were
established prior to the security becoming a threshold security or
prior to the effective date of Regulation SHO. The grandfather
provision was adopted because the Commission was concerned about
creating volatility where there were large pre-existing fail to
deliver positions.
The amendments voted on today will:
* Eliminate the grandfather provision in Rule 203(b)(3)(i) so that all
fail to deliver positions in threshold securities will have to be
closed out within 13 consecutive settlement days, regardless of
whether they occurred before the security became a threshold security.
* Permit previously-excepted grandfather positions that are threshold
securities on the effective date of the amendment to be closed out
within 35 settlement days of the effective date of the amendment.
* Amend Rule 203 of Regulation SHO to extend the close out requirement
from 13 to 35 consecutive settlement days for fails to deliver
resulting from sales of threshold securities pursuant to Rule 144 of
the Securities Act.
* Amend Rule 200(e)(3) to (i) reference the NYSE Composite Index (NYA)
instead of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA); (ii) add language
to clarify that the two-percent limitation is to be calculated in
accordance with NYSE Rule 80A; and (iii) provide that the market
decline limitation will remain in effect for the remainder of the
trading day.
2. Proposed and Re-proposed Amendments to Regulation SHO
The Commission voted to propose amendments to Rule 200 and re-propose
amendments to Rule 203 of Regulation SHO (17 CFR 242.200 and 242.203).
The proposed amendments would modify the long sale marking
requirements of Regulation SHO to require that broker-dealers marking
a sale as "long" document the present location of the securities being
sold. The re-proposed amendments are intended to further reduce fails
to deliver in certain equity securities by eliminating the options
market maker exception to the close-out requirement of Regulation SHO.
In addition, the Commission voted to solicit comment regarding two
narrowly-tailored alternatives to elimination of the options market
maker exception.
The comment period for the proposals will end 30 days from the date of
publication of the proposed rules in the Federal Register.
The options market maker exception provides that any fail to deliver
position in a threshold security resulting from short sales effected
by a registered options market maker to establish or maintain a hedge
on options positions that were created before the underlying security
became a threshold security do not have to be closed out. Today's
proposed amendments would eliminate this exception to the close-out
requirement of Regulation SHO. In addition, the proposed amendments to
eliminate the options market maker exception would include a one-time
35 consecutive settlement day phase-in period for previously-excepted
fail to deliver positions.
3. Amendments to Rule 10a-1 and Regulation SHO
The Commission voted to adopt amendments to Rule 10a-1 (17 CFR
240.10a-1) and Regulation SHO (17 CFR 242.200 et seq.) that will
remove Rule 10a-1 as well as any short sale price test of any self-
regulatory organization (SRO). In addition, the amendments will
prohibit any SRO from having a price test. The amendments will also
include a technical amendment to Rule 200(g) of Regulation SHO that
will remove the "short exempt" marking requirement of that rule. The
amendments will be effective immediately upon publication of the
release in the Federal Register.
The Commission adopted Rule 10a-1 in 1938 after several years of
considering the effects of short selling in a declining market. Rule
10a-1 provides that, subject to certain exceptions, a security may be
sold short (A) at a price above the price at which the immediately
preceding sale was effected (plus tick), or (B) at the last sale price
if it is higher that the last different price (zero-plus tick). Short
sales are not permitted on minus ticks or zero-minus ticks, subject to
narrow exceptions. The operation of these provisions is commonly
described as the "tick test." The tick test applies only to listed
securities, other than Nasdaq-listed securities, traded on an
exchange, or otherwise.
In addition to the tick test of Rule 10a-1, the NASD and Nasdaq have
adopted their own short sale price tests based on the last bid rather
than on the last reported sale for purposes of determining the
execution prices of short sales. These bid tests apply only to Nasdaq
Global Market securities that are traded on Nasdaq or the over-the-
counter market and reported to a NASD facility.
On July 28, 2004, the Commission issued an order creating a one-year
pilot temporarily suspending the tick test and any short sale price
test of any exchange or national securities association for certain
securities. The pilot was created so that the Commission could study
the effectiveness of short sale price tests. The Commission's Office
of Economic Analysis and academic researchers provided the Commission
with analyses of the empirical data obtained from the pilot. In
addition, the Commission held a roundtable to discuss the results of
the pilot. The general consensus from these analyses and the
roundtable was that the Commission should remove price test
restrictions because they modestly reduce liquidity and do not appear
necessary to prevent manipulation. In addition, the empirical evidence
did not provide strong support for extending a price test to either
small or thinly-traded securities not currently subject to a price
test. (Press Rel. 2007-114)
good morning mason and all olympians.....
goood morning mick.......
how about yesterdays stunning legislation....
HUGE DAY TODAY.....!!!!!!!!
Issue 2007-113 June 13, 2007
COMMISSION ANNOUNCEMENTS
SEC VOTES ON REGULATION SHO AMENDMENTS AND PROPOSALS; ALSO VOTES TO
ELIMINATE "TICK" TEST
The Securities and Exchange Commission today voted to take additional
steps to better safeguard investors and protect the integrity of the
markets during short selling transactions by closing loopholes in
Regulation SHO and further reducing persistent failures to deliver
stock by the end of the standard three-day settlement period for
trades.
Erik Sirri, Director of the SEC's Division of Market Regulation, said,
"Today the Commission voted on steps to streamline and tighten short
selling provisions so that markets and investors are better served by
our rules."
1. Final Amendments to Rules 200 and 203 of Regulation SHO
The Securities and Exchange Commission voted to adopt final amendments
to Rules 200 and 203 of Regulation SHO (17 CFR 242.200 and 242.203).
The amendments will further reduce fails to deliver in certain equity
securities by eliminating the grandfather provision. The amendments
also modify the close-out requirement for fails to deliver resulting
from sales of threshold securities pursuant to Rule 144 of the
Securities Act of 1933 (Securities Act). In addition, the amendments
update the market decline limitation referenced in Regulation SHO. The
amendments will be effective 60 days from the date of publication of
the amendments in the Federal Register.
Regulation SHO, which became fully effective in January 2005, provides
a regulatory framework governing short sales of securities and, among
other things, includes the following:
* A definition of ownership for short sale purposes and a requirement
to determine a short seller's net aggregate position.
* A locate requirement, which requires that before accepting or
effecting a short sale order, brokers and dealers must (i) borrow
securities, (ii) make arrangements to borrow securities, or (iii) have
a reasonable basis to believe that securities can be borrowed in order
to make timely delivery.
"* Additional delivery or close-out requirements on designated
"threshold securities." A threshold security means an equity security
registered or required to file reports with the Commission for which
there is an aggregate fail to deliver position for five consecutive
settlement days at a registered clearing agency of 10,000 shares or
more and that is equal to at least 0.5% of the issue's total shares
outstanding. Where a clearing agency participant has a fail to deliver
position in threshold securities that persists for 13 consecutive
settlement days, the participant must take action to close out the
position. Until the position is closed out, the participant, and any
broker-dealer for which it clears transactions, including market
makers, may not effect further short sales in the particular threshold
security without borrowing or entering into a bona fide arrangement to
borrow the security.
* A grandfather provision that provides that the requirement to close-
out fail to deliver positions in threshold securities that remain for
13 consecutive settlement days does not apply to positions that were
established prior to the security becoming a threshold security or
prior to the effective date of Regulation SHO. The grandfather
provision was adopted because the Commission was concerned about
creating volatility where there were large pre-existing fail to
deliver positions.
The amendments voted on today will:
* Eliminate the grandfather provision in Rule 203(b)(3)(i) so that all
fail to deliver positions in threshold securities will have to be
closed out within 13 consecutive settlement days, regardless of
whether they occurred before the security became a threshold security.
* Permit previously-excepted grandfather positions that are threshold
securities on the effective date of the amendment to be closed out
within 35 settlement days of the effective date of the amendment.
* Amend Rule 203 of Regulation SHO to extend the close out requirement
from 13 to 35 consecutive settlement days for fails to deliver
resulting from sales of threshold securities pursuant to Rule 144 of
the Securities Act.
* Amend Rule 200(e)(3) to (i) reference the NYSE Composite Index (NYA)
instead of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA); (ii) add language
to clarify that the two-percent limitation is to be calculated in
accordance with NYSE Rule 80A; and (iii) provide that the market
decline limitation will remain in effect for the remainder of the
trading day.
2. Proposed and Re-proposed Amendments to Regulation SHO
The Commission voted to propose amendments to Rule 200 and re-propose
amendments to Rule 203 of Regulation SHO (17 CFR 242.200 and 242.203).
The proposed amendments would modify the long sale marking
requirements of Regulation SHO to require that broker-dealers marking
a sale as "long" document the present location of the securities being
sold. The re-proposed amendments are intended to further reduce fails
to deliver in certain equity securities by eliminating the options
market maker exception to the close-out requirement of Regulation SHO.
In addition, the Commission voted to solicit comment regarding two
narrowly-tailored alternatives to elimination of the options market
maker exception.
The comment period for the proposals will end 30 days from the date of
publication of the proposed rules in the Federal Register.
The options market maker exception provides that any fail to deliver
position in a threshold security resulting from short sales effected
by a registered options market maker to establish or maintain a hedge
on options positions that were created before the underlying security
became a threshold security do not have to be closed out. Today's
proposed amendments would eliminate this exception to the close-out
requirement of Regulation SHO. In addition, the proposed amendments to
eliminate the options market maker exception would include a one-time
35 consecutive settlement day phase-in period for previously-excepted
fail to deliver positions.
3. Amendments to Rule 10a-1 and Regulation SHO
The Commission voted to adopt amendments to Rule 10a-1 (17 CFR
240.10a-1) and Regulation SHO (17 CFR 242.200 et seq.) that will
remove Rule 10a-1 as well as any short sale price test of any self-
regulatory organization (SRO). In addition, the amendments will
prohibit any SRO from having a price test. The amendments will also
include a technical amendment to Rule 200(g) of Regulation SHO that
will remove the "short exempt" marking requirement of that rule. The
amendments will be effective immediately upon publication of the
release in the Federal Register.
The Commission adopted Rule 10a-1 in 1938 after several years of
considering the effects of short selling in a declining market. Rule
10a-1 provides that, subject to certain exceptions, a security may be
sold short (A) at a price above the price at which the immediately
preceding sale was effected (plus tick), or (B) at the last sale price
if it is higher that the last different price (zero-plus tick). Short
sales are not permitted on minus ticks or zero-minus ticks, subject to
narrow exceptions. The operation of these provisions is commonly
described as the "tick test." The tick test applies only to listed
securities, other than Nasdaq-listed securities, traded on an
exchange, or otherwise.
In addition to the tick test of Rule 10a-1, the NASD and Nasdaq have
adopted their own short sale price tests based on the last bid rather
than on the last reported sale for purposes of determining the
execution prices of short sales. These bid tests apply only to Nasdaq
Global Market securities that are traded on Nasdaq or the over-the-
counter market and reported to a NASD facility.
On July 28, 2004, the Commission issued an order creating a one-year
pilot temporarily suspending the tick test and any short sale price
test of any exchange or national securities association for certain
securities. The pilot was created so that the Commission could study
the effectiveness of short sale price tests. The Commission's Office
of Economic Analysis and academic researchers provided the Commission
with analyses of the empirical data obtained from the pilot. In
addition, the Commission held a roundtable to discuss the results of
the pilot. The general consensus from these analyses and the
roundtable was that the Commission should remove price test
restrictions because they modestly reduce liquidity and do not appear
necessary to prevent manipulation. In addition, the empirical evidence
did not provide strong support for extending a price test to either
small or thinly-traded securities not currently subject to a price
test. (Press Rel. 2007-114)
thanks obi
no doubt!
that kind of attitude is sure to keep me here......?
i know how stucks like to hear how right they are......
passion like that might encourage me to stay.. ;)
good afternoon mick........ ;)
my friend is a ex u.s marshall who had spoken with an attorney involved in this.....
he said they recited a law from england from the 1700,s that said no trade would be honored without shares in hand....
how about congress finally doing something for the little guys...?!?!?!?!?
SEC Votes To End Short-Selling 'Grandfather' Protections
June 13, 2007 11:23 ET
By Judith Burns
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The Securities and Exchange Commission voted Wednesday to approve a change to tighten rules intended to curb manipulative short sales,including so-called "naked" short sales.
The change eliminates a controversial exception that shielded existing short positions from requirements to deliver hard-to-borrow shares within 13 days of settlement. Once the change takes effect, short positions previously protected by
the grandfather clause must be closed out within 35 days.
SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said persistent failures to deliver shares sold short seem to be due to the grandfather protections, which the SEC included in 2004 to prevent stock-market volatility. Critics complained the protections
undermined efforts to clean up abuses involving "naked" short sales.
Short selling involves sales of borrowed securities, producing profits when prices decline. The practice is legal, but the SEC's Regulation SHO sought to prevent "naked" short sales, in which short sellers don't borrow securities they sell.
SEC officials said delivery failures have declined about 35% overall since Regulation SHO took effect and have fallen about 53% for hard-to-borrow stocks defined as "threshold" securities.
-By Judith Burns, Dow Jones Newswires, 202-862-6692; Judith.Burns@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
a good friend of mine called me excited as could be.....
i still see loop holes in the entire bill but tracking the shares is so paramount....
can you say squeeze the DTCC... :D
not only that but now mm,s in all markets must show a source for which they received the shares to short.......