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Technology Stocks : The New QLogic (ANCR) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: THOMAS GOODRICH who wrote (13048)12/9/1997 12:16:00 PM
From: w2j2  Respond to of 29386
 
Nasdaq, in Newest Clean-Up,
May Remove 3,400 OTC Stocks

By DEBORAH LOHSE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Trying to distance itself from some of Wall Street's smallest and most
speculative companies, the Nasdaq Stock Market's parent board is
expected to vote on whether to make about 3,400 stocks no longer
eligible to trade on the market's lowest rung.

The rung, known as the OTC Bulletin Board, is essentially an
electronic-trading forum run by Nasdaq where brokers and dealers can
get up-to-date quotes, trading data, and a list of market makers in roughly
6,800 Bulletin Board securities.

But stocks on the board aren't listed on the Nasdaq market itself, which
can be a touchy issue, since Nasdaq's name is often linked to them. That is
true even though the companies that list on the board either can't meet
listing standards at markets like Nasdaq, or they don't want to file financial
statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These unlisted
issues include foreign securities known as American depositary receipts,
and small regional companies, such as banks that don't seek much stock
trading.

The latest proposal is part of a long struggle for Nasdaq to shake off an
image of being a forum rife with small-stock scams. In recent years
especially, Nasdaq has gained credibility by beefing up trading rules and
standards for companies that trade in its top-tier National Market, home
to such giants as Microsoft and Intel, or its second-tier SmallCap Market.
But since April, Frank Zarb, chairman of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Nasdaq's parent, has been trying to find a way to clean
up the loosely regulated OTC Bulletin Board, which is run by Nasdaq but
which has almost no standards for the companies that list there.

Now, board members of Nasdaq's parent organization are expected to
tentatively approve a proposal to kick companies off the OTC Bulletin
Board if they don't file financial statements to SEC, banking or insurance
regulators
, according to people familiar with the proposal. NASD officials
said that it is their policy not to discuss proposals before the board meets.
Board members are also expected to discuss prohibiting brokerage firms
from quoting prices for OTC Bulletin Board stocks if the brokers don't
have current, reliable financial information on a company.

Also, every broker that recommends a bulletin board stock to a client
would have to review detailed financial statements of the company before
doing so. Finally, the proposal would also require every investor to get a
disclosure statement that would spell out the difference between the
bulletin board and other markets, in terms of liquidity (or ease of trading),
standards, and market-maker obligations, according to people familiar
with the proposal. If the NASD board approves the proposal Thursday, it
will be put out for comment by members.

But these actions won't rid the marketplace of companies that fail to file
publicly available financial statements, people familiar with the proposal
say. Any of the companies that fails to meet the raised standards of the
bulletin board would be able to trade on the Pink Sheets, a less automated
system that is owned by the National Quotation Bureau, which isn't
affiliated with Nasdaq. Standards for the Pink Sheets aren't expected to
be affected by this proposal.

Thus, investors in these speculative stocks likely would find it more difficult
to buy and sell them. OTC Bulletin Board stocks are a little more
convenient to trade, because Nasdaq provides space on its trading
workstations for bulletin-board stock quoting. Investors in the Pink Sheets
must get most of their information, and trade, over the phone.

Currently, stocks can trade on either the OTC Bulletin Board or the Pink
Sheets as long as one market maker "vouches" that the company has
current financial statements. Market makers do this by filing a 15c2-11
form. Because all market makers are NASD members, the NASD has
responsibility for ensuring that market makers are abiding by that rule.

Securities regulators have expressed alarm that unscrupulous promoters,
brokers and traders have taken advantage of the loosely regulated
marketplace to foist worthless stocks on unwitting investors. Securities
regulators have brought a steady stream of stock-manipulation and
conspiracy cases to stem such abuses, which are considered easier to pull
off on the bulletin board because of its thin trading volume and relative
obscurity.



To: THOMAS GOODRICH who wrote (13048)12/9/1997 12:22:00 PM
From: w2j2  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 29386
 
Tom, this will affect BB stocks, but I do not think it will affect Ancor.wj