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Strategies & Market Trends : Stock Attack II - A Complete Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: velociraptor_ who wrote (16085)8/21/2001 11:07:33 AM
From: Challo Jeregy  Respond to of 52237
 
SEC Studies Lifting Ban on Selling Short When Prices Falling
New York, Aug. 17 (Bloomberg) -- The Securities and Exchange Commission may allow
short selling when share prices are falling,
repealing a prohibition adopted in the agency's earliest days to prevent a rerun of the 1929
crash.

SEC regulations bar short sales -- selling borrowed shares with the aim of replacing them
later at a lower price -- when a stock's last move was a ``downtick,'' or drop. The rules
were written to keep short sellers, who profit from declining prices, from accelerating a
stock's decline.

The SEC staff is preparing a proposal to temporarily exempt the most active stocks from
the short sale rule as a test of whether it should be permanently eliminated or altered.
Mary Bender, regulatory chief of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, said she expects
the test to include 100 to 150 stocks.

``If you start with the most active stocks that are the least susceptible to manipulation, you
can get a good sense of whether the doomsayers are right,'' she said.

Larry Bergmann, the SEC's senior associate director of market regulation, declined to
provide specifics about the plans. ``We're
preparing proposals to modernize short sale regulations,'' he said. To take effect, any
proposal by the SEC staff must be backed
by the commission and circulated for public comment.

SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt couldn't be reached for comment.

Hurts Hedging

The CBOE, some brokerages and the Managed Funds Association, a hedge fund trade
group, have told the SEC they want the 63-year-
old short sale rule modified. They say it hampers hedging -- selling short to protect
portfolios from market declines -- as well as arbitrage, or trading to profit from
discrepancies between related securities or markets.

The New York Stock Exchange said it wants the rule preserved because it prevents
manipulation and fraud. The Nasdaq Stock
Market, which isn't covered by the SEC regulation, adopted its own short sale rule in 1994
and wants to maintain it in part because
it's popular with companies that trade on the electronic market.

Short sales are bets that a stock will decline, and can push down a stock price if sellers
overwhelm buyers. Shorting isn't a
sure thing, though: buying back the stock can lift a thinly traded issue higher. In 2000,
NYSE short sales accounted for 11 percent
of Big Board volume.

``It carries a negative connotation, because people don't like it when stock prices go
down,'' said Greg Rogers, head trader
at Aronson & Partners, a Philadelphia money management firm that oversees $5 billion.

In the aftermath of the 1929 crash, President Herbert Hoover and much of Congress and
Wall Street blamed organized short selling for worsening the panic. In the 34 months
ending in July 1932, NYSE prices fell 83 percent. General Electric Co. tumbled from 396
1/4 to 8 1/2.

Otto Kahn, a partner with Kuhn, Loeb, one of the largest investment banks at the time,
testified in a congressional hearing that shorting was ``inherently repellent to a
right-thinking man'' and a ``social evil.''

Message 16237658



To: velociraptor_ who wrote (16085)8/21/2001 11:23:14 AM
From: donald sew  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 52237
 
Velociraptor,

>>>> To put Abby S&P target in another perspective...
It was mentioned that it represents a 28% increase in the index by year end. Given that there are only about 4 months left in the year, it also represents about an 84% annual growth rate for the index fo the last 4 months of the year.
<<<<<

We all are now aware of how wrong ABBEY J.COHEN has been. Its so interesting hearing from TED DAVID and MARK HAINES(this morning) how she has not made herself available for their shows. I bet she seldom declined outright to participate, but used that old strategy of "CONVIENTLY NOT BEING AVAILABLE". The MANIPULATING QUEEN!!!!