Charles Mackay post #4 http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=724 in the guest commentary World Needs Better “Face of American Capitalism” than Private Equity said,
The link immediately above is an 80-minute slide presentation and commentary by Patrick Byrne which as I said on that thread is perhaps the most informative bit I have read or heard regarding just how screwed up are the regulatory mechanisms at play in the US markets. I am a bit hestitant to strongly suggest everyone should listen to what Byrne demonstrates and informs with regard to naked short selling, the resultant failure to deliver (FTD) of the security sold short.
There are many things about which I know nothing and naked short selling is or was one thing. It seems to me that anyone who "owns" a stock based on having seen the money taken from one's account and a position then showing that the stock was "bought" and now "possessed" could be wrong.
If one goes to Byrne's site http://www.ncans.net/ there are many, many links--most of which I have not read. One http://www.nyse.com/Frameset.html?di...ge=/threshold/ shows daily lists of stocks or ETF's for which there are at least 10,000 shares of undelivered stocks or the number of failed deliveries equals at least .5% of the issuer's total shares outstanding, etc.
The Nasdaq also publishes such a daily list http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/aspx/regsho.aspx
I did not count the issues on both lists for just the last day's postings, but if each security listed represents at least 10,000 shares, and I take it no one in the public can know what is the actual number, then the sheer numbers of these securities on these two lists suggest there are lots of people who are wrong when they look at their brokerage statements and deduce that he or she actually owns the position for which they had money taken out of their account three days after "buying" whatever the position.
Byrne in his presentation points out that the accounting made known to the public, i.e, you and me, of these failed to deliver securities may represent only a very small portion of all that may exist.
Charles Mackay http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=724 post #13 wrote
I asked for some clarification from anyone as to how does all this potentially affect me, or anyone reading this who thinks he or she "owns" shares that might be on one of these lists, or it could be that one thinks a position one "owns," and the numbers of FTD's is less that 10,000 issues and is thus not disclosed for such an issue, and there are other ways also that what you believe you hold may not be true.
Charles Mackay's comment above suggests to me in a cash account, that an FTD cannot exist. I don't know if that is true or not.
To my simple mind, an IRA is like a cash account, but perhaps it is not as far as this issue of FTD's is concerned. I do not know.
I have asked the person who is my assigned account executive at Schwab about this stuff. Basically the question: is it possible in such a Cash account, and importantly in an IRA account, that any position represented on a statement or a web-look at the positions in fact represents a strategic failed to deliver of a security?
When I asked him that on the occasion of a perchance meeting while in the local office at Schwab to transact something, I gathered either he did not know about what I was asking, or I did not do well in raising the question. So I sent him the above links and asked the question again in an email. So far he has not answered.
Despite what that dude answers, I would like some others' perspectives about this issue of naked short selling, which is illegal as is the resultant failure to deliver the security that was sold short, but as I understand the actuality of naked short selling is represented as having occurred for every security listed at the above referenced NYSE and Nasdaq sites, and according to Byrne these lists may be or are woefully inadequate in accounting for the actual numbers of failed to deliver securities when accounting between brokerage firms is considered.
If anyone really wants to understand how screwed up are our markets, it strikes me that listening to Byrne's presentation is a must.
If anyone wants to assert that all this is nonsense, then I would like to read such opinions too.
If anyone knows how one can best protect oneself from "owning" a security that one does not really own, I would like to know that.
Originally posted by Charles Mackay
There are many things about which I know nothing and naked short selling is or was one thing. It seems to me that anyone who "owns" a stock based on having seen the money taken from one's account and a position then showing that the stock was "bought" and now "possessed" could be wrong.
If one goes to Byrne's site http://www.ncans.net/ there are many, many links--most of which I have not read. One http://www.nyse.com/Frameset.html?di...ge=/threshold/ shows daily lists of stocks or ETF's for which there are at least 10,000 shares of undelivered stocks or the number of failed deliveries equals at least .5% of the issuer's total shares outstanding, etc.
The Nasdaq also publishes such a daily list http://www.nasdaqtrader.com/aspx/regsho.aspx
I did not count the issues on both lists for just the last day's postings, but if each security listed represents at least 10,000 shares, and I take it no one in the public can know what is the actual number, then the sheer numbers of these securities on these two lists suggest there are lots of people who are wrong when they look at their brokerage statements and deduce that he or she actually owns the position for which they had money taken out of their account three days after "buying" whatever the position.
Byrne in his presentation points out that the accounting made known to the public, i.e, you and me, of these failed to deliver securities may represent only a very small portion of all that may exist.
Charles Mackay http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=724 post #13 wrote
Originally posted by Charles Mackay
Charles Mackay's comment above suggests to me in a cash account, that an FTD cannot exist. I don't know if that is true or not.
To my simple mind, an IRA is like a cash account, but perhaps it is not as far as this issue of FTD's is concerned. I do not know.
I have asked the person who is my assigned account executive at Schwab about this stuff. Basically the question: is it possible in such a Cash account, and importantly in an IRA account, that any position represented on a statement or a web-look at the positions in fact represents a strategic failed to deliver of a security?
When I asked him that on the occasion of a perchance meeting while in the local office at Schwab to transact something, I gathered either he did not know about what I was asking, or I did not do well in raising the question. So I sent him the above links and asked the question again in an email. So far he has not answered.
Despite what that dude answers, I would like some others' perspectives about this issue of naked short selling, which is illegal as is the resultant failure to deliver the security that was sold short, but as I understand the actuality of naked short selling is represented as having occurred for every security listed at the above referenced NYSE and Nasdaq sites, and according to Byrne these lists may be or are woefully inadequate in accounting for the actual numbers of failed to deliver securities when accounting between brokerage firms is considered.
If anyone really wants to understand how screwed up are our markets, it strikes me that listening to Byrne's presentation is a must.
If anyone wants to assert that all this is nonsense, then I would like to read such opinions too.
If anyone knows how one can best protect oneself from "owning" a security that one does not really own, I would like to know that.
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