I guess you need me to tell you to do your jobs. Wall Street requires regulation. Look around you and open your eyes.
Gamestop and many other stocks have been and continue to be a target to illegal naked short selling that needs to stop, protect the retail investors and companies from crooks and cheats that use illegal practices to stay rich and keep the poor broke as well as drive companies that do good in the world into the ground. Get rid of PFOF, insider trading, politicians having any part of trading, dark
It’s sad to see laws being broken and nothing being done to bring justice to the people being taken for granted and used. Billionaires should not be allowed to get away with this kind of nonsense theft. Where is the rule of law? Allowing this type of theft is slowly unraveling our society and has very dangerous implications. Companies are going bankrupt due to companies like citadel shorting
By implementing rules that are so easily maneuvered you’re at best turning a blind eye to naked shorting (fraud) and at worst facilitating fraud and the demise of the trust in American Institutions.
I'm pretty sure you have seen the unfair playing field retail investors have vs market makers and politicians. Something needs to change, for the people to at least level the playing field. We need a fair market, not corrupt where rich get richer and the little guy is screwed over. Thanks.
Please prosecute Citadel for their stock manipulation of GameStop
I want more data, more frequently, with more penalties for omissions and false reporting. Please push for more transparency in the markets.
Any data that is communicated publicly should be communicated in the most efficient manner possible. In a industry where data is considered to be so valuable that firms were willing to spend millions of dollars to have their fiber optic cable runs as close as physically possible to the exchanges so they could get a timing advantage, the short interest report being collected only a twice a month
FINRA 21-19 is a long overdue change. It is clear that the integrity of the United States market has been strained to the edge of disaster, in large part due to systemic risk developed under the regulatory authority of FINRA's outdated short interest reporting policy. While many of the policies mentioned in Regulatory Notice 21-19 address the general breadth of exploitable and ineffective
I am commenting in regards to particular aspects of FINRA 21-19, which I do support and believe should have been enacted long ago. Undoubtedly, the public’s faith in the United States market has been diminishing following the many preventable financial crises that have occurred in the past. The ongoing state of the market from retail investors points of view, frankly appears broken and has failed