| Oct 25 1999   5:15 
 By Judith Burns
 
 (This story was originally published Friday.)
 
 WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--In a move that is expected to generate
 lively debate, the Securities and Exchange Commission last week
 issued a release seeking comment on whether it should ease longstanding
 restrictions on short selling, or perhaps even scrap them altogether.
 
 Short sales occur when an investor sells borrowed stock in
 hopes of repurchasing the shares at a lower price. Unlike a buyer,
 short sellers profit when shares decline in price.
 "It's certainly a provocative release. It will get a lot of
 comment and receive a lot of attention," predicts Howard Kramer,
 a partner at the Washington law firm of Schiff Harding & Waite,
 and formerly an associate director in the SEC's market regulation
 division.
 "The commission is asking: Is it time to take a second look
 at whether regulations put in place to prevent abuses more than
 60 years ago still make sense?" Kramer added.       Indeed, in its "concept release," the SEC noted that its short-selling
 rule has remained fundamentally unchanged since 1938, despite
 profound changes in trading and dramatic improvements in market
 transparency and surveillance.
 "Our goal is to examine ways to modernize our approach to provide
 the most appropriate regulatory structure for short sales," the
 SEC stated in its release.
 Eight concepts deserve consideration, in the SEC's view, including
 the possibility of eliminating the short-selling rule altogether.
 The agency also is seeking comment on changes that would loosen
 restrictions on short selling, such as suspending the rule when
 the stock or market is above a certain price, exempting actively
 traded stocks or hedging transactions from the rule, or limiting
 restrictions to certain market events and trading strategies.
 Revising the definition of a "short sale," or changing the rule
 in response to certain market developments also warrant consideration,
 the agency said.
 "It's good that the commission is taking another look at this,"
 said Stuart Kaswell, general counsel for the Securities Industry
 Association. He said the industry organization will study the
 proposal closely.
 Among other things, the SEC asked if deregulation might spur
 speculation, make prices more volatile, have a "depressing" effect  on trading, or lead to an increase in abusive practices or manipulation.
 On the other hand, the SEC noted that short selling can have a
 positive impact, by contributing to price efficiency.
 Current restrictions on short selling have their roots in 1937,
 when a concentrated burst of short selling, known as a "bear raid,"
 prompted the SEC to adopt rules that generally preclude short
 selling as stock prices decline. The "tick test" approach means
 stocks may be sold short only if the share's prices are rising.
 
 Although the SEC's rule applies only to short sales of stocks
 traded or listed on an exchange, the National Association of Securities
 Dealers has its own rules barring members from short sales of
 Nasdaq listed stocks below the best displayed bid. A 1996 NASD
 study concluded the Nasdaq rule is effective at restricting short
 selling during large price declines. In its release, the SEC asked
 whether self-regulatory organizations such as the NASD should
 keep short-selling rules intact even if the SEC loosens or abolishes
 its own restrictions.
 "There may be a few reasons why they're rethinking the short-selling
 rule," said Cameron Smith, general counsel at Island ECN in New
 York.
 For starters, Smith some market participants have "a theoretical
 problem" with the rule. "Purists think you shouldn't put artificial
 Page 4
 restraints on stocks to prevent them from going down," he noted.
 
 Practical problems also exist in enforcing the rule, Smith
 added. "It is not working very well at the moment," he said, frustrating
 short sellers who can't execute trades even if the share price
 is rising.
 Smith said difficulties stem from the fact that the tick test
 is based on the last recorded transaction in a stock. Traders
 have 90 seconds to report an order, however, and if the sequence
 of trade reporting on the consolidated data tape is off, it can
 prevent short sales from going through, even if it appeared to
 the seller to be on an uptick.
 Extended and after-hours trading could create another problem
 since the consolidated tape doesn't operate after the exchanges
 close. That would mean short sales could only be executed above
 the last price recorded in the regular trading session, which
 could put a big crimp in nighttime short-selling.
 A shift to price stocks in decimals, rather than fractions,
 expected in mid-2000, raises other questions for regulators with
 regard to short selling. Once stocks start trading in increments
 as small as a penny per share, the SEC asked whether short-selling
 prohibitions might kick in after tiny price dips.
 Given those problems, Smith said, "we certainly hope they get
 rid of the short-sale rule."
 At the very least, Kramer said the SEC deserves credits for
 questioning whether its short-selling rules are still useful.
 
 "It's refreshing to see an agency re-examine longstanding rules,"
 he said.
 The proposal is fashioned as a "concept release," which could
 lead to a proposal to change the SEC rules, but doesn't guarantee
 that result. The SEC floated a proposal to refashion its short-selling
 rules in 1976, but withdrew it in response to objections from
 the New York Stock Exchange and the American Stock Exchange. An
 NYSE spokesman said the Big Board had no immediate comment on
 the latest concept release.
 Any change in SEC rules would require approval of the full
 commission.
 -Judith Burns, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6692; judith.burns@dowjones.co
 
 (END) DOW JONES NEWS  10-25-99
 08:15 AM- - 08 15 AM EDT 10-25-99
 
 
 
 
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