The Uptick Rule: Mr. Cox, Is It Really That Devilish? 13 comments
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Christopher Cox's SEC eliminated the Uptick Rule on July 6th, 2007. Since the rule was done away with, the S&P 500 is down 51%. At this point, how much can it hurt to bring the rule back? The government has already thrown enough you know what at the wall to see if it sticks. Is the Uptick Rule that devilish that Cox can't even try to bring it back?

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This article has 13 comments:
By the way, non-log graphs are misleading. They over-emphasize any kind of %-based growth.
> jack
I mean, if its easier for people to either buy or sell freely, the market should settle at the "proper true" value.
I guess theory and practice differ as we see, but u cant blame the lack of uptick rules for the selloff.
There were fundamental reasons for this bridge to collapse... huge leverage built on shaky house values. plain and simple.
The average investor has had his pockets picked by Hedge Funds shorting stocks into oblivion. Now the average investor/tax payer will have to pay into perpetuity to bail out the financial sector, auto sector, etc.
And our Government continues to do nothing except throw our taxpayer dollars at the problem.