Boags, I got Yoko A539's when I got my Buddyclubs and a) they sucked with anything over about 33psi, skittish and nervous feeling, and b) They transition very quickly from lots of grip to nothing, and when you're travelling at speed that can kind of suck.
Bridgestone RE540 and RE55S semis on my DR30 also had a pretty narrow range of pressures that they liked, but they were a bit better in the transition between mega-grip and slideways, but I hardly think we're going to reccomend someone buy semi-slicks for a daily driver.
The cheap and cheerful RE88's and RE592's I run on my 14's are good to drive on, wider transition from grip to nothing and aswell as having a bit more feel for when they are running out of grip they also screech like banshees to let you know.
MX5 is all about feel, and I'd rather have more warning that grip is running out even if it means I cant take a corner 15kmh faster, especially on a short wheelbase car like the MX5.
The whole point of me mentioning it in the first place however was to highlight that going straight to new sticky rubber to stop the car oversteering was a bit of a waste of money when playing with tyre pressures and seeing what works with your car and tyres could fix it for free. Especially if you get new sticky tyres, run the wrong pressures in them and then still have problems.
Braking distances and how hard you can brake, yeah sticky tyres win that, but he wasnt complaining about the braking with his current tyres. I do 200km a day around town in a non-abs Echo on 185 RE592's (previously had RE88's aswell) doing deliveries though and have never had a problem with stopping in a hurry, or keeping SS Commodores honest down Belair Road because I know how hard I can push those tyres.
If you're worried about aquaplaning, I dunno, maybe you could drive slower if you think there is going to be standing water...
Or run narrower tyres