I'm in favour of delisting low trading stocks. There is not much value in keeping them around and there is no money to earn in them anyway. I do think it is good to always have the option to object any delistings before they're finalized. When there are good arguments to keep trading certain stocks they should be heard of course.
I do wonder if there isn't a problem with possible "fraud" though. If someone buys or sells lots of stocks right before the delisting they'll probably make some money by moving the stockprice in their favour. I would like to suggest to already decide the final price when announcing a delisting and freeze any trading in the stock, except for people closing their position.
About the current list, I would like to "save" Elebits and Trauma Center Wii. Elebits is only recently (somewhere in may I think?) released in Europe, so there is a good opportunity that valuable information on this title is released in the near future (possibly quarterly report from Konami?) Trauma Center Wii isn't released in Europe yet, that alone should be enough to keep that stock alive.
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I do wonder if there isn't a problem with possible "fraud" though. If someone buys or sells lots of stocks right before the delisting they'll probably make some money by moving the stockprice in their favour. I would like to suggest to already decide the final price when announcing a delisting and freeze any trading in the stock, except for people closing their position.
About the current list, I would like to "save" Elebits and Trauma Center Wii. Elebits is only recently (somewhere in may I think?) released in Europe, so there is a good opportunity that valuable information on this title is released in the near future (possibly quarterly report from Konami?)
Trauma Center Wii isn't released in Europe yet, that alone should be enough to keep that stock alive.