04.29.2020

Short-Selling Bans Are Disruptive To Markets

04.29.2020

The World Federation of Exchanges (“WFE”), the global industry group for exchanges and CCPs, has today published a paper that reviews the academic literature on short-selling and short-selling bans, comparing the arguments against banning short-selling with the arguments in favour.

The WFE’s paper – What does academic research say about short-selling bans? – finds that the academic evidence almost unanimously points towards short-selling bans being disruptive for the orderly functioning of markets, as they are found to reduce liquidity, increase price inefficiency and hamper price discovery. Indeed, the evidence suggests that banning short-selling during periods of heightened uncertainty seems to exacerbate, rather than contain, market volatility.

According to the literature, during periods of price decline and heightened volatility, short-sellers do not behave differently from any other traders, and contribute less to price declines than regular ‘long’ sellers. As research has shown that short-selling bans are more deleterious to markets characterised by a relatively high amount of small stocks, low levels of fragmentation, and fewer alternatives to short-selling, emerging markets should be particularly wary of bans on short-selling.

Nandini Sukumar, Chief Executive Officer, WFE said: “Based on the existing evidence, the WFE recommends that financial regulators do not introduce short-selling bans, as the academic literature demonstrates not only their lack of effectiveness, but their negative impact on market quality. We would urge jurisdictions that have imposed such bans to reconsider in the light of the evidence.”

Today’s paper follows the WFE’s recent statement where it criticised current bans on short-selling as damaging to markets and failing to achieve their desired effect.

Please click here to read the full WFE short-selling academic review paper.

Source: WFE

COO of the Year Award winner! 🏆
Discover how Jennifer Kaiser of Marex earned the 2025 Women in Finance COO of the Year recognition.

A recent Markets Media article highlights how @tZERO is resetting its vision - focusing on partnerships, regulated infrastructure, and global scale to make tokenized capital markets a reality.

Under CEO @Alan_Konevsky, the company is leveraging regulatory momentum to enable…

Load More

Related articles

  1. FCA Warns on MiFID II Timetable

    DTCC plans to extend clearing hours to support 24x5 trading in Q2 2026.

  2. Constructive Activist Funds Seek to Avoid Proxy Battles

    Market maker said the SEC should not grant broad exemptive relief for trading tokenized U.S. stocks.

  3. FCA Warns on MiFID II Timetable

    Expansion may allow European and Asia-Pacific traders to more easily manage U.S. small-cap exposure.

  4. Clock Synchronization: A Matter of Timing

    24X is the first SEC-approved 23-hour U.S. stock exchange.

  5. NYSE Texas launched in March 2025 as the first securities exchange to be incorporated in the state.

We're Enhancing Your Experience with Smart Technology

We've updated our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy to introduce AI tools that will personalize your content, improve our market analysis, and deliver more relevant insights.These changes take effect on Aug 25, 2025.
Your data remains protected—we're simply using smart technology to serve you better. [Review Full Terms] | [Review Privacy Policy] Please review our updated Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy carefully. By continuing to use our services after Aug 25, 2025, you agree to these

Close the CTA