Mywallst WallSt.net WallSt TV WallSt Radio
Brad_MyWallSt's Blogs - Premium Member
Sep
19
Posted: 2 month(s) and 16 days(s) ago   |   3 Comment(s)   |   Rating: 0 0
Posted by: Brad_MyWallSt

WASHINGTON - Federal securities regulators, in an effort to boost investor confidence in the face of a market crisis, took the dramatic step Friday of temporarily banning the trading practice of betting against financial stocks.

The move, announced on the Securities and Exchange Commission's Web site, will temporarily ban what is called short selling of nearly 800 financial stocks.

Short selling is a legitimate method of trading, but has been blamed for widening the scope of the recent financial crisis and contributing to the collapse of values of investment and commercial bank stocks in particular.

The turmoil has swallowed some of the most storied names on Wall Street. Three of its five major investment banksBear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch — have either gone out of business or been driven into the arms of another bank.

Short selling involves betting against company stocks by borrowing its shares, selling them, and pocketing the difference when they fall.

In its announcement, the commission said it was acting in concert with the U.K. Financial Services Authority in taking emergency action which announced a similar ban there on Thursday.

The SEC said it hoped its move would 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," 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.

Short-selling can contribute to efficiency while adding liquidity to the markets. But a recent wave of the maneuvers — profiting by selling unowned shares of companies in the anticipation their prices will drop — has been blamed in part for the demise of venerable investment firm Lehman Brothers and other big financial companies.

Some British politicians also claim that short-selling attacks were partly responsible for HBOS PLC's abrupt takeover by banking rival Lloyds TSB PLC on Thursday amid a sharply falling share price. Market regulators in Britain, citing "current extreme circumstances," announced a temporary ban on short-selling Thursday.

Cox held a closed-door meeting with members of Congress Thursday night, Treasury Secretary Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. The SEC said its action calls a time-out to aggressive "unbridled" short-selling in financial stocks and said it would consider measures to address short-selling in other publicly traded companies.

The California Public Employees' Retirement System, the nation's largest pension fund, is no longer lending out shares of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, joining a growing number of public pension funds that are attempting to curb short-selling of two investment banks' stocks.

On Wednesday, New York Sens. Charles Schumer and Hillary Clinton, both Democrats, had appealed to the SEC for a temporary short-selling 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."

The SEC on Wednesday had adopted rules it said would provide permanent protections against abusive instances of "naked" short-selling, where sellers don't even borrow the shares before selling them, and then look to cover positions immediately after the sale. Those new rules took effect Thursday, restricting but not banning short-selling by, for example, shortening the required time for short sellers to deliver the stocks underlying the sale transactions.

But some critics assailed those new measures as inadequate to stem the tide of short-selling, and asked for a prohibition on all naked short-selling similar to the SEC's 30-day emergency ban this summer covering the stocks of mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and 17 large investment banks.

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said his office is launching an investigation into whether some short sellers engaged in conspiracy or spread rumors and negative information to drive down the share prices of Lehman, American International Group Inc., Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and other firms.

Some investors contend that naked short-selling, if left unchecked, would have given hedge funds and other aggressive short sellers an unfair advantage to attack other victims after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., which made the biggest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history on Monday.

Merrill Lynch & Co. — being bought by Bank of America Corp. in a $50 billion shotgun deal — or giant insurer AIG, rescued with an $85 billion cash injection from the Federal Reserve, were said to be among the likely targets.

Shares of regional banks and investment firms nationwide continued to be targeted by aggressive short sellers after the SEC's emergency ban took effect in mid-July, according to banking industry representatives. 


   Member Rating: 0 0
Add Comment / Rating 
You need to Sign Up or Login to post a comment or rating 
Member Comments 
Sep 19, 2008 13:20:13

Hak Says:
how come when the banks are in deep shit they get bailed out and when we're in deep shit, we get our shit taken from us?
Sep 19, 2008 13:22:06

Brad_MyWallSt Says:
Ha! Thats so true. We get 2 months behind on a CC payment and you got people calling you at work demanding a payment.
Sep 19, 2008 14:58:33

Suggie Says:

What's really interesting and ironical is that Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, the two remaining independent brokerage houses, were MAJOR SHORTSELLERS of Lehman Brothers!!!