"So, now you have both sides. I see both sides, but have to agree with bonddad in this case because I hate this back and forth of rules and legislation brought on by a crisis. If we're going to have the rule, keep it. On the other hand, I don't see suspending it for a short time as the end of the republic either."
I then did a post on Meghan McArdle saying more or less the same thing.
I didn't say anything about the short-selling ban, largely because I felt exactly the same way about it. I didn't see the point of doing it, other than making it look like the SEC was doing something, which, for all I know, matters, but I didn't see it as ending the republic either.
However, Brian Doherty of Reason seems to have been correct. Read this post which also has a good explanation of short-selling. Here's a piece:
"Most people who short are not doing so out of any attempt to drive a price down; many of them, including huge hedge funds, are often doing so merely to hedge risk when they are otherwise imbedded in transactions that depend on asset prices going up. So, if the SEC tries to make the ban more permanent, they are limiting the ways actors in the economy can cover their risk and spread information—both bad things.
But whether or not the short sell ban continues or even becomes permanent in some form, damage has already been done. The real problem is the sort it might take a Debord or Vaneigem to fully parse: it’s that SEC chief Chris Cox and those who think like him have taken upon themselves, publicly and with violent quickness, to show that they are in charge of social and economic reality, able to reshape it to their desires with their will and imagination; that common and sensible practices whose overall effect is to reveal economic reality more quickly and smoothly are to be halted at their command."
“There’s liquidity out of the marketplace,” said H. Seth Berlin, the principal at Performance Thinking & Technologies, a hedge fund consulting firm. “Did the ban really do what it was supposed to do? Probably not.”
Some investors said that bringing short-selling back to the market could actually bolster stocks. Andrew Fishman, president of Schonfeld Group, an asset manager in New York, said that some of his clients wanted to exit short positions in recent weeks, which would have meant purchasing shares, but they did not do so because they feared they would not be able to borrow the stock again to short it later on.
Mr. Fishman said short-selling has been wrongly blamed. The real problem, he said, is the weakness of financial institutions.
“You can never change the path of a stock,” Mr. Fishman said. “If it’s going to go down, it’s going to go down.”
A tentative conclusion: It didn't help, and might have hurt. More to follow.
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