KONTAN.CO.ID - SEOUL. South Korea's financial market watchdog said on Thursday it had prepared a new monitoring mechanism to detect illegal short-selling trades in the domestic stock market. Under the new mechanism, all short-selling transactions by institutional investors will be electronically processed and then filtered through a central detection system set up at the stock exchange operator to prevent illegal trades, the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) said in a statement. In South Korea, naked short selling of stocks, in which an investor sells shares without first borrowing them or determining they can be borrowed, is banned by the Capital Markets Act.
In remarks prepared for a discussion forum on Thursday to explain the new system to market experts and retail investors, FSS Governor Lee Bok-hyun said: "Illegal short selling has been one of major factors behind the Korea discount by undermining market credibility among domestic investors." "With this double-layered checking system working properly, we hope that it will root out illegal short selling," Lee said. Read Also: Meta Shares Sink on Higher AI Spending, Light Revenue Forecast