Now, think about this: if you are "hedging" a call option on a stock
that you bought, you should be able to short the underlying! What
happens if you cannot?

Best,
Sabri

++++


SEC Considers Revising Shorting Ban in Options Market (Update2)
By Edgar Ortega and Michael Tsang

Sept. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
may revise its ban on short sales to add financial companies and carve
out an exemption for brokerages that pair off brokers in the $1.6
trillion U.S. options market.

The commission may add companies after firms such as M&T Bank Corp.
were left off a list of 799 insurers, banks and securities
institutions barred from short sales. The staff also will recommend
that options market-makers be exempt from the ban, easing concern the
rule would raise investor costs, the agency said in a statement today.

``If they don't fix it, there just won't be an options market on
Monday,'' Steve Claussen, chief investment strategist at OptionsHouse
LLC, the Chicago-based online brokerage unit of options trading firm
PEAK6 Investments LP. ``If they have an exemption for market-makers
that they're allowed to sell stock short, then they can provide a
market in the options.''

The SEC is prohibiting investors from betting against banks and
brokerages to stem a sell-off that erased as much as $3.8 trillion
from stocks globally after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc. and American International Group Inc. U.K regulators and
attorneys general in New York, Texas and Connecticut, and the three
largest U.S. pension funds are cracking down on short sellers.

Short sellers try to profit by betting stock prices will fall. In a
short sale, traders borrow shares from their broker that they then
sell. If the price drops, they buy back the stock, return it to their
broker and pocket the difference.

`Disastrous'

Options market makers would have been prohibited from making short
sales starting next week under the ban adopted today to keep
speculators from driving down stock prices. The Options Clearing
Corp., which guarantees all trades exchange- listed options, said a
ban would have proved ``disastrous.''

The list of companies for which short-selling is banned included
Morgan Stanley, Wachovia Corp., Washington Mutual Inc., Goldman Sachs
Group Inc. and Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. Banks
including Capital One Financial Corp. and Commerce Bancshares Inc.
also were omitted. General Electric Co., which got about half its
profit from financial units last year, was left off the list.

``The commission is willing to consider adding comparable financial
companies as appropriate,'' SEC spokesman John Heine said in a
statement today.

Interactive Brokers

Under rule announced today, market-makers such as Interactive Brokers
Group Inc. and Susquehanna International Group LLP would be unable to
short a stock to hedge their risks when clients buy or sell options on
financial shares. Options give investors the right to buy or sell
stocks at fixed prices in the future.

Market-makers, accounting for about 40 percent of trades, are obliged
to quote prices at which they'll buy and sell securities so investors
are able to complete trades.

The SEC staff will recommend an exemption for the duration of the ban,
scheduled to expire Oct. 2, the agency said in the statement. Stocks
surged in the biggest two-day global rally in 38 years as the
crackdown took effect for speculators who drove down shares of
financial companies.

Roughly 23 million contracts were traded on the seven U.S. option
exchanges today, down from a record 30 million yesterday, according to
OCC statistics.

``Either you had to change the rules or you had to halt options
trading,'' said Henry Schwartz, president of Trade Alert LLC, a New
York-based provider of options market analytics. ``This is the better
choice. You couldn't have left it as it is because options market
makers were refusing to quote without the ability to hedge.''

Option Prices

Prices for options today show that market-makers were already seeking
to compensate for the added risk by widening the difference between
their bids and offers, according to Peter Bottini, an executive vice
president of Chicago-based online brokerage OptionsXpress Holdings
Inc. The wider spreads make it more costly for investors to buy or
sell options.

``For our retail customers, the costs of adjusting their portfolio has
gone through the roof, because the bid-ask spreads have gone through
the roof,'' said Bottoni, a former market maker at the Chicago Board
Options Exchange.

The SEC's order comes in the midst of the biggest drop in
financial-industry shares since at least 1962, according to data
compiled by Birinyi Associates Inc., a Westport, Connecticut- based
research and money-management firm. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and
Morgan Stanley, the remaining independent securities firms on Wall
Street, plunged by the most ever this week, prompting Morgan Stanley
Chief Executive Officer John Mack to say short sellers are using
abusive tactics to attack companies.

To contact the reporters on this story: Edgar Ortega in New York at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Michael Tsang in New York at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Updated: September 19, 2008 18:20 EDT
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