SEC extends short-selling ban on financial stocks for enactment of bailout 
package 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal regulators on Wednesday extended an unprecedented 
ban against all short-selling in the shares of more than 800 financial 
companies, keeping it in place at least until after Congress enacts a massive 
financial bailout plan. 
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the extension of the ban, 
which was put in on Sept. 18 in a bid to shore up investor confidence in the 
face of the spiraling market crisis. 

The ban, which was to expire Thursday, now will last until the third business 
day after enactment of the $700 billion financial bailout plan now before 
Congress. It will end no later than Oct. 17. 

Late Wednesday, the Senate passed the bailout plan, which appeared to be 
gaining ground in the House, where Republican's opposition softened. 

The idea is that the extension will give enough time for financial markets to 
calm, with bailout program's plan to buy up Wall Street's toxic mortgage debt 
possibly starting to have a positive effect. By law, the SEC's emergency ban 
could not be extended beyond Oct. 17. 

In the days since the ban took effect, the stock market has been on a 
rollercoaster ride. On Monday, the day the bailout plan was rejected in the 
House, the market shot downward and sent the Dow Jones industrials on a record 
778-point plunge. 

Short-sellers bet against a stock. The practice, which is legal and widely used 
on Wall Street, involves borrowing a company's shares, selling them, and then 
buying them when the stock falls and returning them to the lender. The 
short-seller pockets the difference in price. 

Although short selling can make markets more efficient and bring in more 
capital, regulators have maintained that it has widened the scope of the 
financial crisis and contributed to the collapsing values of investment- and 
commercial-bank stocks in particular. 

The SEC "has taken steps during recent weeks to address concerns regarding 
short sales in light of the ongoing credit crisis," the agency said in a 
statement issued Wednesday night. "The steps (the SEC) has taken are designed 
to ensure the continued smooth operation of orderly markets. Our actions have 
been taken in consultation with regulators of the major developed securities 
markets around the world, with whom we have coordinated in monitoring market 
reactions." 



http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081001/sec_short_selling.html
To believe in something, and not to live it, is dishonest. 
 - M.K.Gandhi 






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