Govt trading ban could have unintended results

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MARCY GORDON and STEVENSON JACOBS | September 19, 2008 05:07 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — The government's unprecedented move Friday to ban people from betting against financial stocks might be a salve for the market's turmoil but could also carry serious unintended consequences.

In a bid to shore up investor confidence in the face of the spiraling market crisis, the Securities and Exchange Commission temporarily banned all short-selling in the shares of 799 financial companies. Short selling is a time-honored method for profiting when a stock drops.

The ban took effect immediately Friday and extends through Oct. 2. The SEC said it might extend the ban _ so that it would last for as many as 30 calendar days in total _ if it deems that necessary.

That window could be enough time to calm the roiling financial markets, with the Bush administration's massive new programs to buy up Wall Street's toxic debt possibly starting to have a salutary effect by then.

The short-selling ban is "kind of a time-out," said John Coffee, a professor of securities law at Columbia University. "In a time of crisis, the dangers of doing too little are far greater than the dangers of doing too much."

But on Wall Street, professional short-sellers said they were being unfairly targeted by the SEC's prohibition. And some analysts warned of possible negative consequences, maintaining that banning short-selling could actually distort _ not stabilize _ edgy markets.

Indeed, hours after the new ban was announced, some of its details appeared to be a work in progress. The SEC said its staff was recommending exemptions from the ban for trades market professionals make to hedge their investments in stock options or futures.

"I don't think it's going to accomplish what they're after," said Jeff Tjornehoj, senior analyst at fund research firm Lipper Inc. Without short sellers, he said, investors will have a harder time gauging the true value of a stock.

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"Most people want to be in a stock for the long run and want to see prices go up. Short sellers are useful for throwing water in their face and saying, `Oh yeah? Think about this,'" Tjornehoj said. As a result, restricting the practice could inflate the value of some stocks, opening the door for a big downward correction later.

"Without offering a flip-side to the price-discovery mechanism, I think there's a pressure built up in stock prices that only gets relieved in a great cataclysm," he said.

Short selling involves borrowing a company's shares, selling them, and then buying them to return them to the lender later, when the stock falls. The short-seller pockets the difference in price.

Although the practice can make markets more efficient and bring in more capital, the government argues that it has widened the scope of the recent financial crisis and contributed to the collapsing values of investment and commercial bank stocks in particular.

Government officials on both sides of the Atlantic have been denouncing hedge funds and other short sellers they say have swarmed over the limp bodies of venerable investment banks and other big companies. New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo likened them to "looters after a hurricane," and his office is investigating a possible conspiracy among short-sellers to spread negative rumors to pound down companies' stock prices.

The turmoil in recent weeks has swallowed some of the most storied names on Wall Street. Three of its five major investment banks _ Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch _ have either gone out of business or been driven into the arms of another bank. Many contend that short-selling played a key role in forcing the collapse of these institutions.

SEC Chairman Christopher Cox, who with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had met with lawmakers at the Capitol Thursday night, acknowledged that such extraordinary measures would not be necessary in a well-functioning market and said they are only temporary.

Cox said Friday his agency "is committed to using every weapon in its arsenal to combat market manipulation that threatens investors and capital markets." He said the temporary ban "will restore equilibrium to markets."

The SEC also imposed a new requirement, also temporary, for investment managers to publicly report their new short sales of stocks. And the agency eased restrictions on the ability of companies to buy back their own shares, also through Oct. 2, another move aimed at helping restore liquidity to the distressed and volatile market.

Over the summer, the SEC imposed a 30-day emergency ban on "naked" short selling _ where sellers don't actually borrow the shares they sell _ in the stocks of mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and 17 large investment banks. But Friday's ban expanded to all short selling, not just the more aggressive naked variety, and to a much wider universe of companies.

The 799 companies covered by the SEC ban are an A-to-Z of the nation's financial institutions, including the powerhouse investment banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley and commercial banks running the gamut from Bank of America Corp. to Cape Fear Bank Corp. SLM Corp., which is known as Sallie Mae and is the biggest U.S. student lender is on the list, as are Charles Schwab Corp., Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and Principal Financial Group Inc.

Washington Mutual Inc., the nation's largest thrift, which has lost billions from subprime mortgage exposure and seen its shares plunge in recent weeks, also is on the SEC list. So is the NYSE Euronext, the biggest stock exchange, and foreign financial companies whose stock is traded on U.S. exchanges, such as Lloyds TSB Group PLC of Britain and China Life Insurance Co. Ltd.

However, investors still have ways to place bearish bets: by trading in options that turn profitable when a stock drops.

Jim Chanos, a prominent short seller and president of a $7 billion hedge fund, Kynikos Associates, called short-selling a "vital investment strategy" and said banning the practice "will not enhance long-term market integrity."

He argued that investment banks' bad bets on risky assets _ not predatory short-sellers _ were the true cause of the steep declines in the stock price of financial firms.

"Far from being the cause of the crisis, many short sellers were warning months and years ago about problems in this area," Chanos said in a statement.

The new SEC ban also touched smaller investors. Two popular funds that specialize in short selling and are traded on stock exchanges _ ProShares' Short Financials and UltraShort Financials _ were temporarily halted Friday due to the ban. Trading resumed later in the day, but ProShares said it has suspended creating new shares in the funds until further notice.

ProShares Chairman Michael Sapir called the ban "extraordinary" and said it remains to be seen whether it has the intended effect of calming the markets.

"I don't think anyone sees the action today as a long-term solution," Sapir said. "It's a way to calm things down, but it isn't consistent with a free and open market."

The SEC's ban came in concert with Britain's Financial Services Authority, which announced a similar ban there Thursday. Some British politicians had claimed that short-selling was partly responsible for HBOS PLC's abrupt takeover by banking rival Lloyds TSB PLC on Thursday. The ban there was met with a similar reaction as the SEC move _ a mix of relief and skepticism.

"Banning short selling is just a part of a solution," said Nic Clarke, banking analyst at Charles Stanley Stockbrokers. "We view this as a side issue. It doesn't stop the underlying reason for the credit crunch and it doesn't get to the heart of the problem."

___

AP Business Writer Emily Flynn Vencat in London contributed to this report. Stevenson Jacobs reported from New York.

WASHINGTON — The government's unprecedented move Friday to ban people from betting against financial stocks might be a salve for the market's turmoil but could also carry serious unintended cons...
WASHINGTON — The government's unprecedented move Friday to ban people from betting against financial stocks might be a salve for the market's turmoil but could also carry serious unintended cons...
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If nature is calling stocks down, corrupt power and greed can change the rules so stocks will soar. And power is sustained through Novemvber.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 09/19/2008
- robotfog I'm a Fan of robotfog 23 fans permalink
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Do these short sellers have to stand on a chair while they are working?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 09/19/2008

So much for the 'invisible hand'.

Wall Street is officially nothing more than a blackjack table at a casino. Heck, even Baccarat offers you the option of betting on the dealer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 09/19/2008
- Pupster I'm a Fan of Pupster 12 fans permalink

No, it's not that bad if you do your due diligence. Fraud is criminal and will be punished as such. Too bad the regulatory bodies didn't do their jobs properly, but they were gutted and told to do nothing by the Bush de-reg people.

Rot starts in the head. This is Bush's doing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 PM on 09/19/2008
- DonDavis I'm a Fan of DonDavis 2 fans permalink

SEC Ban on 'Short-Selling' Ends McCain Campaign
http://satiricalpolitical.com/?p=3303

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 09/19/2008

How to build a house of cards. Country Wide et al gorge themselves on the real estate market, The loans are bundled and wrapped up in shiny paper, ie "securitized" (Lehman, Merril Lynch, Fanny, Freddie) these securities are merde, but the credit rating companies Duff & Phelps, Standard and Poor's, Moody's rate them , nobody knows whats in them but they have a shiny AAA wrapping AIG can then insure them (credit default swap), which enables the Banks to borrow against these bundles of merde, to the tune of 30 to 1 to buy more bundles which are rated AAA which AIG insures. Everybody lies about what is inside the bundles except the short sellers who are of course unpatriotic economic terrorists who will be "persecuted" now that the people of America have bought the sh*t nobody wants.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 09/19/2008
- iambusto I'm a Fan of iambusto 5 fans permalink

so its all good only when stocks go up? sort of like real estate market for during the first half this decade :)

if there are no shorts, you think stocks will just keep going up. the buyers of these stocks are going to be extremely comfortable buying these stocks knowing there is no selling pressure because of artificially created legislation.

when we are entering a bubble again (and we will in due time), who would be the whisle blower then? how would people show their vote of confidence if a stock becomes overvalued.

you think without govt. bailout these financial companies in trouble that are leveraged to the hilt will just make out fine if there were no short sellers. if you believe so, i would like to smoke whatever you are smoking :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 09/19/2008

In additon the SEC allowing "naked short selling" to continue for so long has helped with the destruction of our markets. For the record, there is a difference between short selling AND naked short selling. http://yourwikipediarevolution.blogspot.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 09/19/2008
- ssgman I'm a Fan of ssgman 8 fans permalink
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Naked Short selling is not the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 09/19/2008

Rightwing american s h i t eh ea ds think we are 'socialists' here in Europe. Let me explain to those numbnuts the difference between US and YOU. IN Europe, CEO's can only afford to have 2 luxury homes and 2 yachts and 5 luxury cars while their employees get 5 weeks a year vacation and work 38 hour work week and can afford to drive a Mercedes. IN America, a CEO can afford 10 luxury homes, 5 yachts and 20 luxury cars while their employees work their a z z off and can only afford to drive a Ford. Oddly enough those European companies STILL make large profits while American companies have to be bailed out by the taxpayers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:51 PM on 09/19/2008
- rbspickles I'm a Fan of rbspickles 9 fans permalink

Yeah, we know :( Expect a large exodus of Americans to Europe soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 09/19/2008
- twofish I'm a Fan of twofish 21 fans permalink

Don't think I haven't considered it. Due to the dollar's weakness, I couldn't afford it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 09/19/2008
- Pupster I'm a Fan of Pupster 12 fans permalink

You make a very legit point. That's because most of the boards that are supposed to oversee the CEO and management are usually appointed by the CEO and management. Instead of oversight, there is cronyism. It's a joke, and there's not one thing said today to address that issue. Instead they are attacking the strawman of short sellers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 09/19/2008
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Preaching to the bankrupted and scammed choir, but thanks.

SOT

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 09/19/2008
- 1sparrow I'm a Fan of 1sparrow 20 fans permalink

the dollar will collapse in mid 2009- right after you have paid you're taxes and they have counted you're payment. obama should bow out now from the election to signify this is a no-win situation. the revolution starts now. jail the bush and his adminstration. confiscate all the money from the top 400 u.s. citizens b-4 they escape. jail one half of all oil execs. bring back the electric car. take away all of bill gates wealth to pay for health care for u.s. taxpayers. base the health care on the canadian model per expense. jail the other half of oil execs. revolt start now- there is no going back. do not believe these stalling tactics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 09/19/2008
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You are 100% dead on!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 09/19/2008
- noen I'm a Fan of noen 4 fans permalink

You are absolutely right. Banning shorts only guarantees our entire economy will crash and crash hard. Your best investment now is ten acres of land a bag of seeds and a shotgun.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 09/19/2008

Puts, Calls, Short selling, Long,...the list of carnival stock attachments is long and helps no individual, just the hedge funds.
All need to be banned from the market! It makes casinos look like sure shots.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 09/19/2008
- ssgman I'm a Fan of ssgman 8 fans permalink
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Too bad the financial companies don't agree with you. Actually, what you are proposing would be the end to our financial system as we know it, which might not be such a bad thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 09/19/2008
- viper234 I'm a Fan of viper234 41 fans permalink

Really? Do you have a 401(k) or some other retirement plan, perhaps a mutual fund that you're planning to use for your senior years? If you do, then the stock market is helping you meet those goals. If you want to get rid of the financial system, and you're not independently wealthy, say bye bye to your income for retirement. Best thing to do is get the Federal Government out of the business of managing your money. Hey, we've got a $10 trillion national debt thanks to these clowns and you trust them to fix mess?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 09/19/2008

You mean betting on whether a stock is going to go up or down is the American Free Market Way? Wow, I thought it was the business. The stock market has become the biggest Off Track Betting institution in the world and you think this is all free markets?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 09/19/2008
- Agent420 I'm a Fan of Agent420 49 fans permalink
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Short selling was a real stupid idea in the first place. I say no bailouts let the b as tards go down the sh it hole where they belong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 PM on 09/19/2008
- Pupster I'm a Fan of Pupster 12 fans permalink

Short selling doesn't have anything to do with the problems afflicting the situation today. The shorts are the scapegoat.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 09/19/2008
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Temporarily!
All we need is another lipstick "controversy" to hog the news and it'll be business as usual.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 09/19/2008

Naked short selling has destroyed hundreds of companies but it was fine until it was going to bring down big financial institutions. Now the US lending another TRILLION dollars to bail out the rich greedy CEO who will take away BILLIONS when the dust settles.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 09/19/2008
- Pupster I'm a Fan of Pupster 12 fans permalink

Hundreds? Name 10.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 09/19/2008
- iambusto I'm a Fan of iambusto 5 fans permalink

good question pupster. they all blame short sellers.

but cant name 1 company that was brought down to bankruptacy due to short sellers !!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 09/19/2008

too little too late??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 09/19/2008
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

This comment is pending approval and won't be displayed until it is approved.

Without "short selling" there is no "free" market.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 09/19/2008
- iambusto I'm a Fan of iambusto 5 fans permalink

its not precisely accurate so let me take a stab.

Without "short selling" there is no EFFICIENT market.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 09/19/2008
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

Efficient for whom?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 09/19/2008
- viper234 I'm a Fan of viper234 41 fans permalink

I didn't hear anyone screaming about short selling when the markets were hitting all time highs. Traders were short selling the market even at those high points. This is just the Federal Government sticking its irresponsible fingers into areas of the economy that it doesn't understand. They are going for the "quick fix" to "improve investor confidence" or "stop investor whining."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 PM on 09/19/2008
- BlueBoomer I'm a Fan of BlueBoomer 28 fans permalink

There should also be a way, since it's the RESPONSIBLE TAXPAYERS who will have to foot this bill, for the TAX-DODGERS RESPONSIBLE, i.e. the CEO's etc. of the lending institutions that bundled/hid these bad mortgages in with good ones, to be sued by the government and/or the public in a class-action suit (John Edwards, are you listening), to garnish/recover the exhorbitant bonuses, etc. these thieves received... THEY should be expected to foot their "fair share", based on their companies' involvement.

And, can someone PLEASE tell me why the Dems aren't doing "Keating 5" ads to demonstrate McCains questionable stance on economic ethics?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:06 PM on 09/19/2008

They did more than just "bundle", they borrowed against the bundles at 30 to 1 (something humans can not do but banks can) and bought 30 more bundles with the money, which they could borrow against again, and AIG insured all these bundles, in the belief that no one could ever find out what was in these bundles.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 09/19/2008
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

It was raw naked human GREED.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 09/19/2008
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