Subject: S7-08-22: WebForm Comments from Ronald R. Marquez
From: Ronald R. Marquez
Affiliation: Retired, Investor

Aug. 16, 2022

 August 16, 2022

  I strongly support transaction-by-transaction reporting because it eliminates the ability to \"hide within the aggregate\" transparency means transparency and aggregates are not transparent.

I am highly supportive the 15-minute reporting requirement, saying the cost and effort are justified to prevent fraud and prevent hiding in loopholes.

Victimized companies need a greater ability to defend themselves against predators, and that \"short selling in the dark\" harms true competition and price discovery. The idea that a small number of short-selling funds \"know best\" and can hammer unsuspecting companies in the dark is shameful.

It is very apparent that retail will benefit from increased transparency. We have a much better idea of the risks of our decisions and transactions if we can see who is targeted which companies. If funds are allowed to short in the dark, retail investors remain dangerously unaware of the risks they take on when purchasing securities.

The new and very desirable phenomenon of the public serving as first-line watchdogs in monitoring short selling data for securities fraud, strengthening the SEC and better enabling it to fulfill its mandate, at no cost.

There are known dangers inherent in long, untracked lending chains, that can lead to economic fragility. Securities lending activity can hide massively destructive chains of obligation that can even be a threat to national security, and so transparency in this area is more important than it has ever been.

Please do not let large Fund and Market Makers like Citadel continue to operate in the dark, with continuous motivations to harm retail for their own financial windfall and gains. Their comments and changes to the Rule will serve to greater harm investors like me. Thanks for listening.