More than one in six trades in S&P 500-listed stocks took place between 3:30 and the 4 p.m. closing bell last year. But I guess it is not allowed here?
“Marking the close” is a form of market manipulation. Simply put, the practice is an attempt to influence the closing price of a security by executing purchase or sale orders just prior to the close of trading. Such a rush of orders can artificially inflate or depress the closing price for the security and impacts orders that are to be executed at the closing price.
Dear Lord here it does not "impact orders that are to be executed at the closing price"!!!!
executed at the closing price.
executed at the closing price.
Funny but I never see any orders being executed at the "Market Price" at the close, for goodness sakes this is lucky to trade 10k shares in the last 10 Minutes.
If they were worried about this they would randomly move the time at the close that market.
There are 4 key elements regulators must establishto prove a Rule 10b-5 violation:
Manipulation or Deception (through misrepresentation and/or omission) Materiality
“In Connection With” the purchase or sale of securities “In Connection With” the purchase or sale of securities “In Connection With” the purchase or sale of securities
actually, regarding scam company LWLG, attempting to paint the stock price at the ask at the end of the day in order to manipulate the stock price of company is a felony that violates Federal Securities laws
claiming that one doesn't know this it not an excuse for not getting criminally indicted, convicted and sentenced to a lengthy prison term
this is one guy who got caught and got criminally indicted for the end of day stock manipulation
"The indictment said Mr. Lewis manipulated the price of the Fireman's Fund stock by asking two Jefferies traders to bring the stock up to $38 a share by the close of trading on May 8, 1986...."
please provide links to this security law that prevents a person from trading 100 shares at 3:59 thereby marking it at the bid or at the ask, both of which commonly happen with LWLG, I've never heard of such a securities law