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To: blebovits who wrote (323)12/12/1999 12:40:00 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 924
 
You'll need deep pockets for the legal issues facing you Isaac. I have fed you a paltry 5 large in the mid 50's. Now be a good pussy crim and buy me in above market and we can get on with the discovery process thus showing the world how the yiddish mafia works.



To: blebovits who wrote (323)12/12/1999 12:06:00 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 924
 
Chasing Ghosts at Nasdaq

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

EW YORK -- Why do some NASDAQ stocks zoom and swoon
each trading day? And why do these moves seem wilder all the
time?

Although several factors contribute to the increasingly common
roller-coaster action in stocks, some veteran traders have an intriguing
theory about what's driving many of the moves. They say many of the
biggest price swings are a result of manipulation by traders who place
sizable orders to buy stocks on electronic trading systems and withdraw
them seconds later.

This lures in other traders who,
thinking a new buyer is in town,
jump in to ride what they hope
will be a buying wave.

Yet even as unknowing investors
pour into the stocks and drive
them higher, the pretenders have
already withdrawn their bids and
are selling. The shares soon fall.

Traders in New York call these
phantom bids. In London, the
practice is called "spoofing" the
market.

Spoofing has increased
substantially in recent years, traders say, and is now a regular practice in
many NASDAQ stock trades. The National Association of Securities
Dealers, which runs NASDAQ, recently told the Securities and
Exchange Commission that it was experiencing a big increase in canceled
orders on its SelectNet system, which connects NASDAQ
market-makers. The jump in cancellations is a concern to NASDAQ,
because it taxes the capacity of the system.

J. Patrick Campbell, NASDAQ's chief operating officer, said he did not
believe that the increase signaled market manipulation or that phantom
bids influenced investor behavior. "But there are two sides to every
story," he said.

One stock that a trader said was subject to phantom bids in recent
weeks is Diversinet, a developer of e-commerce technology. The shares,
which traded at $1.50 a year ago, peaked at $29 this month. The stock
opened on Friday around $19, spiked to $25 about 45 minutes later,
quickly fell back and closed at $19.6875.

Spoofing the market is easier these days for three reasons. First is the
rise of electronic communication networks, which allow traders to place
orders anonymously and to cancel them immediately with no
consequence. The NASD system requires traders to keep their bids and
offers available to other investors for 10 seconds.

Propelling stocks this way is also easier because firms that make markets
in NASDAQ stocks are unwilling to commit big capital to many stocks,
instead limiting their exposure to 100-share blocks at a time. Even a
1,000-share buy order can move the market.

The growing use of computers to trade stocks is also helping spoofers.
Now that sophisticated trading equipment allows investors to watch
second-by-second changes in NASDAQ stock prices on their screens,
throngs of traders looking for a rocketing stock jump on board.

Is it any wonder that volatility is near record levels in the stock market
today? Leuthold Weeden Research of Minneapolis says the Standard &
Poor's 500 has moved up or down 1 percent or more on 39 percent of
trading days this year. Only during the vicious bear market in 1974 were
stocks more volatile. That year, stocks moved more than 1 percent on
45.1 percent of trading days.

Meyer Berman is a veteran hedge fund manager in Boca Raton, Fla.,
who specializes in stocks. He says he is very concerned about spoofing
and the volatility that it creates. "It destroys the integrity of the market,"
Berman said. "An individual investor may gain at times, but in the end he'll
lose because he'll get caught in an issue that's falling."



To: blebovits who wrote (323)12/12/1999 5:29:00 PM
From: Ben Wa  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 924
 
Better eat your meat, or else you don't get any pudding.