April 20, 2022
As a retail investor I am highly disturbed by the content of this new proposed rule that would effectively allow for FTDs (Failure To Deliver) to continue and worsen, which can be abused by market makers and used in conjunction with illegal naked shorting and abusive dark pool trade routing to control and suppress the price on security trading. This does not in any way benefit investors and in fact could be extremely harmful. This is the exact opposite direction that the SEC is supposed to be going, protecting retail investors.
Please do not allow SFTs (Security Financial Transactions) proposed in this rule, to create new and potentially endless layers of manipulation to be allowed, whereby the very real financial obligations of the FTDs get passed along instead of settled. It allows for abusive practices where market makers are never accountable for their failings. This is not acceptable and creates an opportunity to harm retail investors and it violates our rights for a free and fair market.
Remove this proposed rule and furthermore please do not try to propose something similar again in the future, as iterations of this have been rejected in the past and continue to be rejected by educated investors every time they resurface. Retail investors are continuing to learn more about the abuse and manipulation that has gone on for years and proposals like this, that are only intended to legitimize illegal manipulation for the sake of market makers is just insulting.
The mission of the SEC is to look out for the well-being of investors such as myself, so I would propose that you direct your attention to doing so. This would best be accomplished by banning Payment For Order Flow which is inherently harmful to retail investors and which unfairly benefits Market Makers and brokers who do not have investors best interest in mind. Another worthy target for your attention would be to shut down the abusive use of dark pools by market makers such as Citadel which has been used to undermine the true value of securities traded by retail investors and to suppress price discovery.