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Re: None

Friday, 09/09/2005 1:38:57 PM

Friday, September 09, 2005 1:38:57 PM

Post# of 4278
NASD- Ralph Lambiase - Lets locate this guy. What is this crap that no complaints have been heard about NSS since Reg SHO?

Posted by: BBBabe
In reply to: None
Date:9/9/2005 12:00:13 PM
Post #of 32719

NASD IS PROBING NAKED SHORT SALES
By RODDY BOYD
If the National Association of Securities Dealers has its way, the naked shorts will be forced to cover up.
The NASD has requested data from the stock-lending operations of Wall Street giants in a bid to get to the bottom of what one regulator has called an epidemic of so-called naked shorting.
The requests went out to dealers large and small, from Morgan Stanley to Janney Montgomery Scott.
Naked shorting occurs when a short seller hoping to profit from a decline in a stock's price fails to borrow shares prior to establishing the position.
The practice has the potential to swamp thinly traded stocks with sell orders; numerous companies have argued that naked shorting has forced their stock prices below minimum listing requirements.
While always technically illegal, the Securities and Exchange Commission enacted Regulation SHO in January to curb the practice once and for all.
One individual at a large Wall Street firm that received the NASD's request said that it focused on stock loans resulting in trades that do not settle properly.
Regulators and anti-naked shorting advocates argue that dealers lend out more shares than are publicly available to trade.

An SEC official confirmed that no complaints have been brought in the nine months since Regulation SHO went into effect.

One avenue where additional pressure will be put on the Feds to act is the state level.
Ralph Lambiase, the head of the Connecticut division of securities and business investments, is said to be heading up an 11-state task force designed to crack down on the practice.
The task force, under the auspices of the North American Securities Administrators Association, and consisting of state securities regulators from all 50 states and Canada, is plotting strategy in meetings this week.
One state securities regulator, Bill Reilly of Florida, said he expected the increased effort would result in more voluntary compliance from dealers, as well as enforcement activity.
NY Post


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