Quote from Robert Weinstein:
I find it interesting that there are traders that have posted that not only are they not against the SEC proposal but would actually be in favor of it. (I am not trying to attack anyone. I do think that perhaps some of the opinions where shot from the hip and by people who may not do a lot of trading from both sides long and short)
Firstly and this is perhaps the most important point of this debate is that all of the proposals including the one the SEC has pushed into the front is a ban ONLY on YOU. Not the market makers, Specialists, or option market makers.
So the whole idea that this is a ban on short selling is ludicrous at best and will most surely hurt (retail) day traders both long and shorts in favor of market makers.
With this so called "ban" in place the next time you want to short a stock you WILL get in line after the market makers get their fill first.
You don't short stocks and only trade to the long side? Well sorry but don't expect much of a change one way or the other. You should have no opinion that this ban will aid your trading in any way. If you do you have most likely based it on zero public evidence (I would welcome someone to show some evidence that a ban would be good for anyone OTHER than market makers)
Some say that Bear and LEH went down due to "bear raids" but I would argue that they went down because they went broke (and I lost a bundle with being long LEH so I remember that one well but I sure as hell don't blame shorts for either my loss or that LEH went BK)
I think its a very scary thing to turn the clock back and allow for more manipulation by the big money on Wall St and suggest that we let the SEC know that we want to keep the playing field as level as we been able to so far get it. Don't turn yourself into a second class citizen with stocks. Ask the futures traders if having shorts is a bad thing. After all every single futures contract has a long and a short.
Thanks for reading my opinion on this and I wish you guys the best in trading.
Robert
Good Post! If the proposed restrictions do not apply to market makers, specilists etc. then this creates an apartheid caste system within the market. How ironic that the Dem's would bestow Wall Street firms with exclusive rights over average citizens in the marketplace? Could there be an equal protection challange to this if it is implemented? After all, the retail investor should be entitled to an equal playing field in terms of execution
versas institutions.