Betting on Stocks Still Available…. Just Not From SEC

Written by:
Jagajeet Chiba
Published on:
Sep/19/2008
Henry Paulsen

The Securities and Exchange Commission early Friday imposed a temporary emergency ban on short-selling of financial company stocks, a trading method that bets the stocks will go down. As the financial crisis widened, entreaties had come from all quarters to stem a swarm of short-selling contributing to the collapse of stock values in investment and commercial banks.

Nevertheless, betting on stocks is still readily available at online prediction markets that specialize in financial wagering. Most of these companies - Ladbrokes and intrade.com to name a few - are based out of Europe. Gamblers at intrade were giving the Dow 92.5 percent chance of closing higher than on the previous day.

the government on Friday said it would safeguard assets in money market mutual funds and temporarily banned short-selling of financial company stocks. The Treasury Department has asked Congress to give it sweeping power to buy up toxic debt that has unhinged Wall Street.

President Bush authorized Treasury to tap up to $50 billion from a Depression-era fund to insure the holdings of eligible money market mutual funds. And the Federal Reserve announced it will expand its emergency lending program to help support the $2 trillion in assets of the funds.

Both moves are designed to bolster the huge money market mutual fund industry, which has come under stress in recent days.

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Jagajeet Chiba, Gambling911.com

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