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Gregory Hosmer Comment On Regulatory Notice 21-19

Daily short reporting. None of this every 15 days. Also eliminate this T+2 reporting nonsense so others can naked short in the days between. No more illegal malarky. How about any purchased stocks (which can be used now for short ladder attacks) are forced towards covering shorts? Until all shorts are covered by short seller... all purchased stocks can't be sold, they have to be routed to the borrowing party to cover. Forced cover with any stock purchase.

Kyle Leahy Comment On Regulatory Notice 21-19

I t hink the current vagueries of the short market are an absolute disaster. We need precision and accuracy to determine reasonable market moves- something in this "self-regulating" market, we simply dont have. Too many companies fail to disclose or accurately disclose their short positions, and simply pay the fine later after theyve made their money on the backs of those who couldnt see the danger. I wouldnt settle for anything less than 100% short position disclosure, with jailtime, not fines, for those that fail to do so.

Tony Comment On Regulatory Notice 21-19

The additional transparency and short interest reporting rules that FINRA is proposing are a welcome start. All short interest reporting should be made available to the public for 2 reasons. First, this information directly impacts all investors. Second, it is clear that there is no way possible for FINRA, SEC or any other regulator to police the markets. By making all reported short interest information public will lead to a more transparent and therefore a more fair market.

Cortney Comment On Regulatory Notice 21-19

To whom it may concern: I would like to know if there are plans to repair the fines in regards to short interest reporting, naked shorts and dark pool trading? I think that naked shorts should be fined based on the quantity of fake shares multiplied by the price of the share in question. So for 5 million fake shares at say $25 per share would result in a $125 million fine. This is a fair way, since you are penalizing the guilty party by making them pay the cost of each fake share that was created.

Chris Oreilly Comment On Regulatory Notice 21-19

I’m just a small time retail investor and I know my opinion doesn’t matter… I’d just like to see maybe more regulation on the dark pool. You have market makers like citadel and many others not just them that also have hedge funds groups, they take trades and stash them in the dark pool. How could we allow the dark pool to have more volume then the actual market? Where do we draw the line in the sand with this manipulation? I mean I understand why we have it but it’s being used for other things now that much is obvious.

Michael Beach Comment On Regulatory Notice 21-19

In a fair and open market there should be transparency and a level playing field for all investors; be they retail or institutional. The # of shares shorted should be available IN REAL TIME throughout the trading day. Dark pool trading must be eliminated. We can clearly see that large institutions are buying massive quantities of AMC/GME stock (for example) on the dark pool and then flooding the public exchange with shares (via selling, short-selling and short laddering) in order to MANIPULATE THE PRICE DOWN.