Portal Forums Links Register FAQ Community Calendar Log in

Join Early Retirement Today
Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Are sleazy stockbrokers ruining the US economy?
Old 07-25-2008, 01:44 PM   #1
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 18,085
Are sleazy stockbrokers ruining the US economy?

Discuss. Or don't.
__________________
"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."

- George Orwell

Ezekiel 23:20
brewer12345 is offline  
Join the #1 Early Retirement and Financial Independence Forum Today - It's Totally Free!

Are you planning to be financially independent as early as possible so you can live life on your own terms? Discuss successful investing strategies, asset allocation models, tax strategies and other related topics in our online forum community. Our members range from young folks just starting their journey to financial independence, military retirees and even multimillionaires. No matter where you fit in you'll find that Early-Retirement.org is a great community to join. Best of all it's totally FREE!

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest so you have limited access to our community. Please take the time to register and you will gain a lot of great new features including; the ability to participate in discussions, network with our members, see fewer ads, upload photographs, create a retirement blog, send private messages and so much, much more!

Old 07-25-2008, 01:51 PM   #2
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
FinanceDude's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 12,483
I don't think most "sleazy stockbrokers" can move the market themselves. Seems to me that most very expert "sleazy stockbrokers" go make millions of dollars on Wall Street........

I also don't think hedge funds are killing the markets, after all the Yale endowment, among others, is basically a hedge fund. Plus, getting millionaires to pay 2% a year and give up 20% of the profits is a heck of a business model anyways.........
__________________
Consult with your own advisor or representative. My thoughts should not be construed as investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results (love that one).......:)


This Thread is USELESS without pics.........:)
FinanceDude is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 02:57 PM   #3
Administrator
MichaelB's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 40,725
Quote:
Are sleazy stockbrokers ruining the US economy?

It's not the stockbrokers or the hedge funds. It's the Venezuelan Beaver Cheese sellers -they're cheating us all out of our fair share.
MichaelB is online now  
Old 07-25-2008, 03:06 PM   #4
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
ls99's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 6,506
No not ruining economy. If they work for you, they take the sucker's money, make money for you. Then you can buy your mega-yacht, employ crew, spend biiig on diamonds etc. entertainers of choice, throw lavish entertainment.

So their impact on the economy is a zero sum game.
__________________
There must be moderation in everything, including moderation.
ls99 is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 03:10 PM   #5
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 1,305
I vote for 'uneducated public'
Greedy people and unscrupulous people (including stock brokers) add to the bad fray.
__________________
Life is GREAT!
megacorp-firee is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 03:25 PM   #6
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
harley's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: No fixed abode
Posts: 8,765
I don't think the economy is being ruined at all. Maybe just a little ill right now. What comes down must go up. The worst I can say for our economy is that I think the federal debt is too high, and even that is not a permanent condition. The poorest person I know has a car, a couple TVs, and a decent (if subsidized) apartment. Not too shabby for a ruined economy.

Jesus said (in JC Superstar anyway) "the poor will be with us always". I suspect the greedy and sleazy will too. We can't feel morally superior to the poor (there but for the grace of God...), so we need these others to measure ourselves against.
__________________
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement." - Anonymous (not Will Rogers or Sam Clemens)
DW and I - FIREd at 50 (7/06), living off assets
harley is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 04:11 PM   #7
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
ladelfina's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,713
It's not a question of 'sleaze'.. because this is the way the system works. It is A-moral (not moral or immoral).

We have been conditioned to believe the supposed "free" market has a morally superior complexion to any other construct.

If you look at brewer's comment on the Australian bank thread.. hmmm.. he says those bankers were stupid idiots to believe in an AAA credit rating.

Oooowwhhhhkayyy.

So let's cross-pollinate the "stupid debtor" meme with the "stupid banker" meme. The result is that the majority of people (rich/poor.. smart/stupid) have been taken for a ride. Hmmm. Why is that? Not because a gun was put to anyone's head, but because we believe in the system the way certain credulous folk believe in Tammy Faye Bakker.

Because the system requires many losers and a tiny cadre of winners. This is not condemnation at this point (I'm at the "acceptance" stage of grief/loss). It's the debt-monster pyramid mechanism that sucks previously sane and solvent people/institutions into its wake.

Harley, if you don't think the economy is being ruined.. look at the desperate faces and stammering testimony of Paulson and Bernanke. Look at the vacant strip malls and the empty ravaged housing developments. A plague of locusts could not have done more damage. Trillions of dollars of "wealth" have already evaporated, with more to come.

Banksters LIVE on the disconnect between what they know, and what the public knows. Every degree of financial IQ the public gains is a material net loss for them.

Again, this is just how it is. If everyone were like many on the ER forum, the recent growth in the financial sector would have been a tiny percentage of what it became.

Stockbrokers have little to do with it. They make money on volatility and people wanting to trade shares. They don't care if that action comes from shares going up in price, or going down in price. I don't know what brewer is getting at except to distract us from the quite-rotten fixed-income universe.

There's a card game going on in which every high-stakes player has been dealt 2, 3 or 4 aces. It cannot hold.
ladelfina is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 05:10 PM   #8
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 7,968
It's those evil fer a ners - now that the dollar's been trashed - first Budweiser and now Genentech - at least back in the day the Japanese bought golf courses(I don't golf) and Rockerfeller (I like Pace). .

Wait wait - it's an election year - it's a secret Republican plot - where is 'Son of Deep Throat' now that we need him so we can follow the money.

I lost two last year - a REIT to the Aussie's and a ute to the Scoties.

Where is our undercover agent uncovering those huge pools of private money?

where's my tinfoil hat!

heh heh heh - use your hardhat liner, buckle up and pssst - Wellesley.

By the By - hard core Democrat is case you haven't guessed.
unclemick is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 05:28 PM   #9
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
ladelfina's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,713
unclemick, far be it from me to trash the Wellesley fund w/r/t others.. but its equity portion is 85% US/Canada. It's got bonds.. hmmm AAA bonds, but what the hell does that mean anymore? I just think we are facing a climate in which past truisms may well no longer hold. [I guess you can say, well, Wellesley will be the redoubtable band that plays us out on the Titanic, though, for what that is worth.]
ladelfina is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 05:48 PM   #10
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 7,968
Quote:
Originally Posted by ladelfina View Post
unclemick, far be it from me to trash the Wellesley fund w/r/t others.. but its equity portion is 85% US/Canada. It's got bonds.. hmmm AAA bonds, but what the hell does that mean anymore? I just think we are facing a climate in which past truisms may well no longer hold. [I guess you can say, well, Wellesley will be the redoubtable band that plays us out on the Titanic, though, for what that is worth.]
Hmmm - perhaps like the gentleman who posts here and warned everyone about his oil purchase - it is only fair to disclose that way back in the early 90's in addition to pssst Wellesley I owned a huge chunk of: er Vanguard Trustee's Co-mingled International, went to AAII chapter meetings in New Orleans and actually thought I understood multi asset(slice and dice in modern vernacular).

Sooo - given my track record - I gots Target Retirement 2015 cause Vanguard computers don't pay any attention to my great thinking. And for the Putz - The Norwegian widow is going to buy American provided I can get turned around and not charge into the future looking into the rear view mirror.

heh heh heh - of course like the Saint's - it may be a long wait.
unclemick is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 05:53 PM   #11
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
cute fuzzy bunny's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Losing my whump
Posts: 22,708
Quote:
Originally Posted by ladelfina View Post
Wellesley will be the redoubtable band that plays us out on the Titanic, though, for what that is worth.]
Beats tossing the deck chairs overboard.
__________________
Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful. Just another form of "buy low, sell high" for those who have trouble with things. This rule is not universal. Do not buy a 1973 Pinto because everyone else is afraid of it.
cute fuzzy bunny is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 06:10 PM   #12
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
harley's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: No fixed abode
Posts: 8,765
Quote:
Originally Posted by ladelfina View Post
Harley, if you don't think the economy is being ruined.. look at the desperate faces and stammering testimony of Paulson and Bernanke. Look at the vacant strip malls and the empty ravaged housing developments. A plague of locusts could not have done more damage. Trillions of dollars of "wealth" have already evaporated, with more to come.
I don't see it. The Fed and the Treasury are not the economy. They are a bunch of rubes that think they are the economy. Those desperate faces and stammering testimony are a result of the discovering that despite their efforts the economy does what it wants to. And as politicians, they don't understand that doing nothing might be more productive than interfering.

There have been empty strip malls since the year after they started building the damn things, and every cycle of housing booms leaves a bunch of late starters stuck holding the bag.

It's good that you put "wealth" in parenthesis, becase it was virtual, not real. Wealth doesn't evaporate, it moves around. People who played games they didn't understand lost money, some others made money, and most others did just fine, because they didn't buy or sell, so their homes are still worth more than they were when they bought them to live in years ago. Just like my portfolio is worth more than it used to be, even though the daily report of it's supposed worth went up and down just like it always has. That doesn't matter, because I have a plan that takes into accounts the big swings both ways.

I didn't buy that Rolls Phaeton in 1999 when I was RICH!!! And I'm only riding my bike because I enjoy it now that I'm not RICH!!! anymore. I'm on schedule, because the economy is just doing what it always does.
__________________
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement." - Anonymous (not Will Rogers or Sam Clemens)
DW and I - FIREd at 50 (7/06), living off assets
harley is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 06:24 PM   #13
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
ladelfina's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2,713
Quote:
as politicians, they don't understand that doing nothing might be more productive than interfering.
In that, you are right.

I'm glad you have a personal oasis, but the majority are up the proverbial creek without a paddle, much less a Phaeton. The manipulations that have gone on are unprecedented in our lifetimes and will affect even those who have tried to be prudent.

I just think this is more than a mere "cycle" and worse than usual. More people and entities than ever counted on that "wealth".. to fund pensions, to float CDs, to pay teachers, to borrow from foreigners, to build sewage plants, to outfit soldiers. To run the USofA. That money is not there and it never was, to a greater degree than ever.
ladelfina is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 06:58 PM   #14
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 7,968
Right ! - bring back the good old days - starting 1970 with psst Wellesley.

A little shooting at Kent State, VP canned for corruption, a little 73/74 market dip, Watergate, those pesky Frenchies wanted to change $ for gold, first ever look with news coverage inside Fort Knox(to make sure the gold really was there).

The Whip Inflation Now buttons were a nice touch.

We need a gut grinding 5-6000 point drop in the DOW mixed with a little 10% a yr inflation to bring back the memories.

Hindsight says if panic strikes go straight to Wellesley and skip the gold, guns and freeze dryed food.

Will our politicians become statesman and our stockbrokers saints? Possibly not - but somewhere in the whining, wailling, and complaining - much of it justified - we will stumble thru once again.

heh heh heh - so far I got the world 'by both cheeks' even with Target Retirement instead of that other one. So where is Brett gonna end up - now that's important!
unclemick is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 07:03 PM   #15
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
audreyh1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,145
I think it was the finance marketing geniuses who came up with the CDO concept who have dealt a hard blow to the economy. Of course that's because all the big banks, investment houses, ratings agencies and foreign governments climbed on board while the Fed and Treasury smiled on benignly.

Greed, greed, greed. It gets us every time.

Audrey
audreyh1 is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 07:41 PM   #16
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 18,085
Quote:
Originally Posted by audreyh1 View Post
I think it was the finance marketing geniuses who came up with the CDO concept who have dealt a hard blow to the economy.
Maybe. Or maybe not.

It is worth keeping in mind that the financial markets in the US are places where there has always been a lot of innovation. Sometmes the innovation leads to a dead end, other times to a blow up (portfolio insurance in the 80s, CDO squareds in the oughts, idiotic dot coms in the 90s, etc.). But by and large the innovation is mostly positive. Without this innovation, we wouldn't have a large and liquid interest rate swap market, or catastrophe bonds, or even mortgage backed securities. All of these things are pretty much critical to the smooth and efficient functioning of our society, and the dead ends and blow ups have genrally been more than made up for by the positive aspects of such innovation.
__________________
"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."

- George Orwell

Ezekiel 23:20
brewer12345 is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 07:47 PM   #17
Moderator Emeritus
Nords's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Oahu
Posts: 26,860
Quote:
Originally Posted by brewer12345 View Post
... sleazy stockbrokers ...
Redundant.
__________________
*

Co-author (with my daughter) of “Raising Your Money-Savvy Family For Next Generation Financial Independence.”
Author of the book written on E-R.org: "The Military Guide to Financial Independence and Retirement."

I don't spend much time here— please send a PM.
Nords is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 07:55 PM   #18
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
audreyh1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,145
Quote:
Originally Posted by brewer12345 View Post
Sometmes the innovation leads to a dead end, other times to a blow up (portfolio insurance in the 80s, CDO squareds in the oughts, idiotic dot coms in the 90s, etc.).
Yup. Amazing how the financial innovations can end up in big blow-ups. Because investors (even and especially the supposedly sophisticated investors) start thinking the new-fangled thingie is infallible and stop paying attention to the risks.

Seems to happen over and over. It's inevitable - part of the human condition.

Audrey
audreyh1 is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 07:58 PM   #19
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 18,085
Quote:
Originally Posted by audreyh1 View Post
Yup. Amazing how the financial innovations can end up in big blow-ups. Because investors (even and especially the supposedly sophisticated investors) start thinking the new-fangled thingie is infallible and stop paying attention to the risks.

Seems to happen over and over. It's inevitable - part of the human condition.

Audrey
You are missing my point: innovation in the capital markets is a decidedly good thing, not a bad thing.
__________________
"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others."

- George Orwell

Ezekiel 23:20
brewer12345 is offline  
Old 07-25-2008, 08:10 PM   #20
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
cute fuzzy bunny's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Losing my whump
Posts: 22,708
Besides, the sleazier stockbrokers and financial planners create much of the markets inefficiencies. If everyone made smart, informed choices then none of the rest of us would make a bunch of money.
__________________
Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful. Just another form of "buy low, sell high" for those who have trouble with things. This rule is not universal. Do not buy a 1973 Pinto because everyone else is afraid of it.
cute fuzzy bunny is offline  
Closed Thread


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Current US Economy godoftrading FIRE and Money 3 05-31-2008 05:47 AM
economy crisis? godoftrading Other topics 11 05-30-2008 07:56 PM
Is this how our economy really works? dumpster56 FIRE and Money 38 02-01-2008 03:29 PM
Spending Less because of the Economy TromboneAl FIRE and Money 51 12-19-2007 09:07 PM
Direction of US Economy James5v FIRE and Money 37 11-08-2007 06:55 AM

» Quick Links

 
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:48 PM.
 
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.