The right to invest is a freedom of choice and having that right taken away is unconstitutional, unethical and is anti-capitalism.
I personally wish to continue to invest in cryptocurrency (and BITO) just like I trade on the foreign exchange as well as on the stock market.
Comments:I'm an experienced investor. Over 60 years investing in common stocks. Please allow. I only use leveraged elf's a few times when markets are out of balance.
Thanks you, James Goss
Taking away this right does not all a true free market. There are numerous ways to trade that are higher risk such as weekly options and micro stocks, what is the difference? This limits what should be a true and free market.
Comments:Please do not in any manner limit the use of leveraged and inverse ETFs. I utilize these investment vehicles along with mutual funds and individual stocks.
More choices for consumers, never less.
Feesung Steven Pang
Thank you for asking for comments. I am a fairly new investor (got more serious in January). I love numbers and reports so you can imagine my frustration with all the different results at the end of each day regarding short interest. Fintel would say one thing and Ortex another, etc. I also follow litigation news as well and had a suspicion confirmed when a firm was accused of marking shorts as
Hello, I would like more transparency when it comes to reporting short interest. Right now short interest doesn’t account for naked shorting which is illegal but still being done and the data’s does not always reflect the current state. Every platform charge a subscription fee in order to view short interest which should be available just like every other data. Short interest from ortex, fintel,
Market makers and Hedge funds have turned the stock market into a casino. The practice of short selling and even worse naked short selling are nothing short of criminal. Allowing these firms to manipulate the price of shares at will, in dark pools, without any threat of consequences is reprehensible. How the SEC continues to allow this practice shines light on their impotence and questions the
Comments: FINRA should not over-regulate the ETF market, which is quite efficient as is. I have traded ETFs for 40 years and they have served me well as far as picking a sector rather than a singular stock.
I oppose restrictions on my right to invest. Inverse funds provide a good hedge methodology in times of rising rates and stock pull backs. I do not want to lose this useful tool in managing my accounts.
We have always had the ability to trade stocks and funds that we have determined to trade. We understand the risks and if people don't then they just need to take responsibility for our trading or not trade at all.