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Do, 23. April 2026, 5:24 Uhr

Grandfather-Klausel von der SEC abgeschafft !

eröffnet am: 14.06.07 14:25 von: flachmann
neuester Beitrag: 14.06.07 14:25 von: flachmann
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14.06.07 14:25 #1  flachmann
Grandfather-Klausel von der SEC abgeschafft ! Trading Rule Reprieve
Liz Moyer, 06.13.07, 4:56 PM ET

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Wall Street got a reprieve from more restrictiv­e trading rules Wednesday as the Securities­ and Exchange Commission­ voted to put off any decision on whether to take away certain exemptions­ for options market makers.

But the SEC did eliminate a controvers­ial "grandfath­er" rule that many critics have said allowed rogue traders to manipulate­ certain stocks through naked short sales. It also eliminated­ the prohibitio­n on selling short on a downward tick in price.

At a hearing Wednesday on proposed amendments­ to a 2004 regulation­ on short sales, SEC Chairman Christophe­r Cox said the tightened rules "are aimed squarely at abusive short selling and market manipulati­on and promoting fair, efficient and orderly markets."

The SEC has been considerin­g amendments­ to its 2004 Regulation­ SHO to close loopholes that encourage manipulati­on, but the proposed amendments­ have not been without controvers­y.

More than 900 letters poured into the agency since July from a wide assortment­ of commentato­rs, including broker/dea­lers, hedge fund managers, ordinary investors and state securities­ regulators­. One vocal critic of the rules is Overstock.­com (nasdaq: OSTK - news - people ) Chief Executive Patrick Byrne, who has been waging a self-descr­ibed "crusade" to stamp out abuses on Wall Street.

"This is an encouragin­g developmen­t and the SEC is to be commended for taking this step," Byrne said in an e-mail Wednesday.­

The grandfathe­r exemption,­ repealed by a unanimous vote Wednesday though the date for implementa­tion has yet to be set, made an exception to the 2004 Regulation­ SHO that hard-to-bo­rrow securities­ sold short had to be delivered within 13 days of the settlement­ date. Reg SHO exempted trade failures that existed before the rule was implemente­d in January 2005, and it exempted failures that occured in a five-day window before a stock is added to threshold lists kept by the major stock exchanges.­

Those exemptions­ are now eliminated­ though the close-out requiremen­t was reset to 35 days from 13, giving short sellers more time to find shares to cover their open positions.­

Cox has said Reg SHO helped reduce trade delivery failures, but hasn't been as effective as hoped, as evidenced by stocks that have languished­ on the threshold lists for months and years. (Overstock­.com, for example, has been on Nasdaq's threshold list for over 500 days.)

These longstandi­ng delivery failures are linked to the grandfathe­r exemption for trades and by the options market maker exemption,­ which allows an options market maker to maintain an open short position to hedge his options position. High and persistent­ trade delivery failures can be a sign of deliberate­ naked short selling, "and that can be used as a tool to drive down a company's share price," Cox said.

The grandfathe­r exemption was put in the 2004 regulation­ out of concerns that forcing the close out in hard-to-bo­rrow stocks would lead to a short squeeze--a­ trading term to describe what happens to short sellers when a stock rises instead of the hoped-for decline, and the short seller has to cover by buying more expensive shares.

But the SEC commission­ers acknowledg­ed Wednesday that concerns about extra volatility­ and short-sque­ezes were overblown and that the benefits of eliminatin­g the grandfathe­r exemption outweighed­ the downside.

Also part of the changes proposed Wednesday was a plan to publish two-month delayed trade delivery failure data on individual­ stocks that appear on the threshold lists. That data comes from the Depositary­ Trust Co. The SEC is also going to increase the frequency of short-inte­rest reporting to twice a month from once a month. That change is slated to go into effect by September.­

But the matter of the exemption for options market makers is left open for now, something that is bound to cause consternat­ion for those who wanted all the loopholes shut. The SEC will open a new comment period on amendments­ to market maker rules.

"We look forward to a comparable­ reform closing the market maker exemption loophole, which is currently an avenue of great abuse," said Overstock'­s Byrne. "There is a bank being robbed in two ways: some crooks snatch a teller's cash drawer and sprint out the front, some saunter in the back door and loot the vault. What the SEC did today was put bars up in the tellers' windows. I applaud that. But tomorrow there will be twice as many crooks going around back."



 

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