Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2004 8:12 PM Subject: Trade Through Rule Mr. Chairman, I can not believe that the SEC is actually considering abolishing the 'Trade Through Rule'. The very mission of the Securities Exchange Commission is to protect the least sophisticated investors, and this rule is the platform on which those protections are built. If the trade through rule is abolished, do you genuinely think that professional traders and investors are going to allow themselves to get worse prices in favor of execution speed?? Market professionals demand, and get, both already. It is the small investor who will wind up on the short end of this very long stick if you allow executions at whatever price is most convenient (read: profitable) for the executing firm. Please don't fall for the laughable argument that today's investor is too savvy to get taken. Ninety percent of today's retail orders are executed electronically. Most firms offer nearly free execution rates for market orders. That's because they make a living by selling these market orders to trading firms. Why would a trading firm actually pay for an order to execute? Not because they are going to get the best possible price for the customer, but because that customer is going to get the absolute worst legal price that the trading firm can give. The trading firm is the other side of that customer's trade, and then the trading firm goes out and gets the best possible execution for themselves, thereby locking in a few cents that rightfully should have gone to the customer originally. By eliminating the trade through rule, you'll simply take the cuffs off the trading firms. When Mr. Jones in Ohio goes on the internet and places his order to buy 500 shares of XYZ Corp., his broker will forward his order to a trading firm who will sell Mr. Jones XYZ at whatever price he likes. XYZ is offered at 20.00 on the NYSE, but Mr. Jones will get an execution at 20.15, all in the name of speed and accuracy, or course. Mr. Jones, savvy investor that he is, will brag to his friends about the super fast, and super cheap purchase he just made, while Mr. KnightTrimark will brag to his fellow traders about the $75.00 he just stole from Mr. Jones. I challenge you to explain to me how that will make America's marketplace better, or safer for it's investors. Please Mr. Chairman, anyone with an ounce of common sense can see that the trade through rule is one of the few protections that small investors have left. It's of paramount importance that you remember your mission to protect America's investors and leave the trade through rule as it is. Vincent J Buccigrossi