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SEC Follow Up Exhibits Part C SEC_OEA_FCIC_001760-2501

SEC Follow Up Exhibits Part C SEC_OEA_FCIC_001760-2501

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Reg SHO Pilot Report 2/12/2007<br />

One view of price restrictions is that they help prevent “bear raids,” or that they make it<br />

more difficult for would-be manipulators to drive prices down below their true values. On the<br />

other hand, price restrictions might also make it more difficult for short sellers to move prices<br />

back toward their true value in response to upward manipulations. Because price restrictions are<br />

inherently short-term constraints, any substantive impact on the susceptibility of securities to<br />

manipulation is most likely to be manifest at short horizons. For this reason, we focus our<br />

investigation on price patterns that might indicate manipulative behavior at a daily or intraday<br />

frequency. To explore these issues, we proceed along three avenues of investigation.<br />

First, to the extent that price restrictions create an environment less conducive to price<br />

patterns that might indicate downward manipulation and more conducive to price patterns that<br />

might indicate upward manipulations, we might expect to observe more extreme negative<br />

returns, and fewer extreme positive returns, for pilot stocks than for control stocks. To<br />

investigate this, we use our control-sample methodology to test whether the skewness of the<br />

returns distribution of short-horizon returns differs across pilot and control stocks. 16 Our results<br />

indicate no statistically significant impact of the pilot program on return skewness, measured at<br />

five-minute, thirty-minute, or one-day return intervals.<br />

Second, we identify positive and negative price “spikes,” or instances when extreme price<br />

moves are reversed shortly afterwards, and examine whether the frequency of positive and<br />

negative spikes differs across pilot and control stocks. We find that at a short (five-minute)<br />

horizon, pilot stocks tend to experience more price reversals than control stocks, but that this<br />

result is the same for negative and positive price reversals. At a thirty-minute horizon, we find<br />

no evidence that there are more price reversals for pilot stocks than control stocks.<br />

16 Bris, Goetzmann, and Zhu (2004), in a study of the effects of short sale regulations around the world, find<br />

evidence suggesting that short selling constraints can affect the skewness of the returns distribution.<br />

Prepared by the Office of Economic Analysis 9

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