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SEC Temporarily Bans Short Selling

By Associated Press | September 19, 2008

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission took the dramatic step early today of temporarily banning the routine practice of betting against company stocks.

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Chip Somodevilla/Getty

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission stands yesterday at Washington, DC.

The move, announced on the agency's Web site, is a reflection of regulators' concern about the widening scope of the financial crisis as entreaties come from all quarters to stem a swarm of short selling.

In the announcement, the commission said it was acting in concert with the U.K. Financial Services Authority in taking emergency action to "prohibit short selling in financial companies" to protect the integrity of the securities market and boost investor confidence.

"The commission is committed to using every weapon in its arsenal to combat market manipulation that threatens investors and capital markets," the SEC chairman, Christopher Cox, said in a statement. "The emergency order temporarily banning short selling of financial stocks will restore equilibrium to markets."

The move, he said, would not be necessary in a well-functioning market and is only a temporary step that is part of the actions being taken by the Federal Reserve, the Treasury and Congress.

A recent wave of the market maneuvers — where traders seek to profit by selling shares they don't own in the anticipation the prices in the company will drop — has been blamed in part for the demise of venerable investment firm Lehman Brothers and other big companies.

Mr. Cox, Treasury Secretary Paulson, and the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, held a closed-door meeting last night with members of Congress.

The SEC said its action calls a time-out to aggressive short selling in financial stocks and said it would consider measures to address short-selling in other publicly traded companies.

Short selling, in a normal market, contributes to efficiency while adding liquidity to the markets. But now, the SEC said, it appears that "unbridled" short selling was contributing to the sudden price declines in the securities of financial institutions.

On Wednesday, Senators Schumer and Clinton appealed to the SEC for such a temporary ban, saying the watchdog agency "has the power to take a temporary but important step to help restore a measure of stability to our financial markets."


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I'm really of two minds on this "problem" maybe we should let everything fail that's going to fail and get... [MORE]

John Doe 

Sep 19, 2008 20:45

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