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Gold/Mining/Energy : Westrend Natural Gas - I.D.E. Hot Stock

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To: Leigh McBain who wrote (1493)7/17/1998 5:40:00 PM
From: Gene Veinotte   of 2011
 
Lots of posts today for a .26 stock. I thought something was going on, like maybe NASDAQ or ?

" SEC Approves Rule Cutting Nasdaq's Minimum Quote Size by 90%
7/16/98 12:57

SEC Approves Rule Cutting Nasdaq's Minimum Quote Size by 90%

Washington, July 16 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Securities
and
Exchange Commission approved a rule that would reduce by 90
percent the minimum number of shares that dealers on the
Nasdaq
Stock Market must quote for any trade.
The rule, which could go into effect as early as next
week,
gives dealers more flexibility in an attempt to encourage
them to
post quotes for more stocks -- increasing competition and
ease of
trading on Nasdaq. Dealers, also known as market-makers, use
their own capital to buy and sell stocks for investors when
no
immediate matching order is available.
The rule would reduce to 100 shares, from 1,000 shares,
the
minimum quote size, or the number of shares a dealer must be
willing to buy or sell at the quoted prices. The plan, known
as
the ''actual size rule,'' was proposed by the National
Association of Securities Dealers, which runs Nasdaq.
''The actual size rule should give market-makers more
flexibility to manage their risk,'' the commission said in
its 45-
page order. It ''likely will produce more accurate and
informative quotations, increase competition, and encourage
market-makers to maintain competitive prices.''
The rule would affect the proprietary quotes posted by
dealers trading from their own personal accounts, which make
up
more than half of all Nasdaq transactions. Proprietary quotes
affect all investors and dealers because they often set the
best
available price in the market.
The proposal emerged from a year-long pilot project
involving first 50 and then 150 of the largest Nasdaq stocks.
The
pilot found that most dealers continued to make quotes of
1,000
shares or more, without harm to liquidity or trading spreads.
The
new rule would affect all 6,000 stocks that trade on the
nation's
second largest stock market, though it wouldn't affect their
prices.
''This makes sense because it allows people to show what
the
real interest in an order is, rather than an artificial
volume,''
said SEC Commissioner Isaac Hunt. ''It's good for Nasdaq.''
The plan has been vigorously opposed by small
order-entry
firms, or ''day traders,'' who try to make quick profits by
placing rapid-fire trades when prices fluctuate. The firms,
also
known as ''SOES activists'' because of their heavy use of
Nasdaq's Small Order Execution System, have said it isn't
economical for them to place 100-share orders because of the
transaction costs involved.
Order-entry firms that had opposed the proposal were
muted
today in their criticism, noting that many of them already
adapted by cutting their use of the SOES system since the
pilot
project began.
''I'm very disappointed, but most firms already stopped
trading on SOES,'' said Jim Lee, co-owner of Momentum
Securities
in Houston and president of the Electronic Traders
Association, a
group of 45 day-trading firms.
Many of these firms now are trading Nasdaq stocks on
Nasdaq's SelectNet system or on private electronic trading
systems such as Reuters Group Plc's Instinet or Bloomberg
LP's
Bloomberg Tradebook, Lee said. Bloomberg LP is the parent
company
of Bloomberg News.
Chris Block, the chief executive of Block Trading in
Houston, another day-trading firm, voiced support for the
rule
proposal. ''You shouldn't have to bid more than the actual
size
if you don't want to buy that much,'' he said.
Large brokerages have voiced support for the proposal,
saying they had been tied up by current requirements to
execute
the numerous 1,000-share orders placed by SOES traders. The
SOES
electronic system automatically executes some small stock
orders
at a market-maker's quoted prices.
The SOES system, already shrinking, appears short-lived.
It
would be consolidated with Nasdaq's largest trading system,
SelectNet, under an NASD proposal now under consideration by
the
SEC. The plan has drawn widespread support from brokerages
and
investors. "

Perhaps these guys should look into an auction market concept.
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