Skirting the Short Rules -- again.........

.and you wonder why we are in such a mess. But, of course, if you just run your company, the shorts wont' bother you? Right?

“The trade works like this: A market maker who needs to cover a short position buys the stock from person A and delivers it to person B. The market maker then sells "calls" to person A -- options that convey the right to buy a similar amount of stock. Since the market maker is selling the options, he is now in a position to sell the stock. After a day or two, person A exercises the options, obliging the market maker to deliver the shares, leaving him with his original short position.”





http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122654248114423203.html#



* NOVEMBER 13, 2008



Tactic Lets Traders Dodge Rule on Short Selling

By TENNILLE TRACY



Some options traders are skirting short-selling rules using a complex trade that has caught the attention of regulators.



The Securities and Exchange Commission has rules that limit the use of short selling, by which traders sell stock they don't own. But Dow Jones Newswires has found cases of market makers skirting those rules with a trade involving stocks and options. It enables them to refresh short positions without having to deliver the stock within six days, as the SEC demands.



The practice isn't common, and the opaque nature of the options market means it is impossible to identify which market makers are doing this. Nevertheless, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority told Dow Jones Newswires it has an "active docket" of such cases it is examining.



The trade works like this: A market maker who needs to cover a short position buys the stock from person A and delivers it to person B. The market maker then sells "calls" to person A -- options that convey the right to buy a similar amount of stock. Since the market maker is selling the options, he is now in a position to sell the stock. After a day or two, person A exercises the options, obliging the market maker to deliver the shares, leaving him with his original short position.



Since August, Dow Jones has reviewed more than half a dozen cases where this trade appears to have occurred, involving the stock of companies such as Sears Holdings Corp. and American Capital Ltd.



The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority also is reviewing such cases. "These would be sham transactions used to make sure that the market maker maintained its hedging short-stock position," said Tom Gira, executive vice president for market regulation at Finra.



Market makers routinely sell stock short to hedge positions they take in options, thereby greasing the wheels of the options market. If they sell a put or buy a call, they sell stock to cushion themselves against falling share prices that hurt the value of their options.



Right now, an options market maker who has sold a stock short has six days to deliver shares to the buyer. They usually borrow the shares from an institution with a large inventory of the stock, such as a pension fund or bank.



Sometimes, however, market makers struggle to borrow the shares or find it is too costly to do so. Other times, the lender wants the stock back.



If they fail to deliver the stock within six days, they could be forced to buy it back and potentially lose millions of dollars, said OptionMonster co-founder Jon Najarian.



The trade under review allows them to avoid this scenario because it restarts the clock on the six-day deadline.



The trade could also be used as part of an arbitrage, where market makers profit from an imbalance between the prices of puts and calls.



When a company's stock is hard to borrow, sometimes its puts are more expensive than its calls. Market makers can profit from the situation by selling the puts and buying the calls.



This is known as a reverse conversion, effectively giving the market maker a long position in the stock. To avoid losing money if the company's stock drops, market makers short it as a hedge.



In July 2007, two market makers who are brothers, Scott Arenstein and Brian Arenstein, paid fines of $3.6 million and $1.2 million, respectively, after the American Stock Exchange pursued disciplinary action for conducting similar trades. In paying the fines, the Arensteins neither admitted nor denied the charges.



"With the Arenstein case, we felt like we had cracked the code, so to speak," Finra's Mr. Gira said. "Now, we're looking for similar activity."



Write to Tennille Tracy at tennille.tracy@dowjones.com
 
Short selling is a public service. No company has the right to sell shares to the public on its own terms. The companies that complain about shorting techniques are just those companies who are dependent on ready access to stock issuance to fund ONGOING OPERATIONS.

The straightforward way to combat shorts is to shut the f*ck up and PAY A DIVIDEND.
 
Quote from BlueHorseshoe:

Short selling is a public service. No company has the right to sell shares to the public on its own terms. The companies that complain about shorting techniques are just those companies who are dependent on ready access to stock issuance to fund ONGOING OPERATIONS.

The straightforward way to combat shorts is to shut the f*ck up and PAY A DIVIDEND.

Doesn't work. One company issued shares that were mandated to be registered only in the name of the holder. They couldn't be registered Street name. They showed up in Street name all over the place.

I think a lot of it is over; the firms, like UBS are scared of being shut down. But no matter what you did, it never worked.
 
Quote from athlonmank8:

shorting has NOTHING to do with these drops

Who said it did? The article was pointing out a variation of a theme - manipulation. Manipulation has a lot to do with these drops - and spikes. This is a form of manipulation.

Another problem with it is the hand slap offenders get. The article says "sham" and yet the offenders keep the profits, pay a pittance, and go on about their day. It needs to stop, or we'll all be in the street.
 
Banning short-selling already caused a market crash within a mere month of the rules being implemented.

People who oppose short-selling are therefore bearish unpatriotic market manipulators who are driving companies to the wall, causing job losses, bankruptcies, personal distress, making people unable to afford healthcare, housing, or food. They need to be fired, arrested, sued, and imprisoned for their crimes.
 
Quote from flytiger:

Who said it did? The article was pointing out a variation of a theme - manipulation. Manipulation has a lot to do with these drops - and spikes. This is a form of manipulation.

Another problem with it is the hand slap offenders get. The article says "sham" and yet the offenders keep the profits, pay a pittance, and go on about their day. It needs to stop, or we'll all be in the street.
[/QUOte

Thanks for the article! But holy shit man get off your fucking soap box already. could you not have posted this in one of the 15 other threads you have started railing against the shorts? Was it really neccessary to start yet another thread? My guess is yes, as people tired of the same old same old in the other threads.

If your goal really is to expose manipulation, not just piss and moan about shorts, why not put some of those great reporting skills to work for us and expose the manipulators on the LONG side as well? Start doing some of you little expose's on LONG side manipulation, you know how traders, hedge funds, IB's conspire to run up garbage stocks sucking in the unsuspecting all the while dumping the shit out. Or maybe any one of the other 500 techniques that mkt players use to dupe dumb money on the LONG side.

C'mon, try a little balance in your reporting of exposing 'manipulation' . It may make your claims of being a champion of the mkts a little more credible. At the very least it would just sound like the same recycled shit.

Thanks again for the article. Look forward to the next expose on mkt manipulation.
 
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