iiphos,
The market has become more efficient due to decimalization, therefore a freefall of support is less likely because of it. With the fraction system and the fact that spreads were often $1/2 to a $1 wide, the short sales rule had value for the reasons I noted in my prior posts. The rules slowed the downturns velocity during wide market fraction spreads where price could clip down by $.50 to a $1 at a time. Decimalization has reduced the effectiveness of the rule and hence why it is now outdated. To have abolished the rule during a fractional wide spread market would have been a mistake...today it now makes sense with narrow spread decimalization. The posts earlier were to support the theory of the rule and why they made sense during the fractional wide spread days versus today. So the evolution of change whereby decimalization brought more market efficiency had to occur first and hence not a coincidence to what I believe will be the inevitable abolishment of the rule.
The market has become more efficient due to decimalization, therefore a freefall of support is less likely because of it. With the fraction system and the fact that spreads were often $1/2 to a $1 wide, the short sales rule had value for the reasons I noted in my prior posts. The rules slowed the downturns velocity during wide market fraction spreads where price could clip down by $.50 to a $1 at a time. Decimalization has reduced the effectiveness of the rule and hence why it is now outdated. To have abolished the rule during a fractional wide spread market would have been a mistake...today it now makes sense with narrow spread decimalization. The posts earlier were to support the theory of the rule and why they made sense during the fractional wide spread days versus today. So the evolution of change whereby decimalization brought more market efficiency had to occur first and hence not a coincidence to what I believe will be the inevitable abolishment of the rule.
