alternatively I'd add that some investors wait only seconds to recoup their investments
10/13/2011 10:03:41 PM
Sure it is. It's funny. It's funny because it's ah, bigger than, ah... you know, a normal hat.
10/13/2011 10:12:04 PM
I'd add HFT is a healthy liquidity providing market activity to the list of lies. Anyone notice any volatility in the marketplace recently? Add leveraged ETFs to the equation and prob 90% of market volume is computers scaming quotes looking for orders to frontrun or ETFs rebalancing. Comforting to know one in ten trades express opinion on the price of the security. The SEC Seems only too happy to continue to allow this parasitic trading to continue. Thank god for regulators, it is gonna take more than the flash crash to stop this scam. Oh goodie.
10/13/2011 11:33:24 PM
10/13/2011 11:49:56 PM
I think that depends on what you're defining as "high frequency trading." If you're talking about computers making trade orders a bazillion times per second, at margins of few hundredths of a cent or whatever, then yeah...I would agree with you. That becomes a contest of who has the best computers and algorithms, and as best as I can tell, is only detrimental and has no value anywhere outside the field of computer science.
10/13/2011 11:56:14 PM
^, ^^^completely agree about lessening the role of HFT. I'd add that the SEC has contemplated how to address HFT (especially in cases of clear frontrunning), but as you probably know, its incredibly complicated. In a market that is determined by less than a second you would need extremely accurate timestamps on what trades happened when and regulators don't always get information that is accurate enough (down to the millisecond?) to carry out any sort of action. Among other reasons that I'm not sure I fully understand.Add to to that the SEC's budget just got slashed (and their responsibilities grew due to Dodd-Frank) and its just a huge uphill battle.[Edited on October 14, 2011 at 12:03 AM. Reason : this is in a nutshell why I will be attending occupy Raleigh this weekend][Edited on October 14, 2011 at 12:04 AM. Reason : ,]
10/14/2011 12:02:41 AM
10/14/2011 2:21:58 AM
The majority of retires are counting on social security. No, Warren Buffet won't ever need it, but he's not the intended recipient. Retires don't get corporately sponsored pensions anymore unless they're lucky enough to have a strong union, and 401k style plans showed how vulnerable they are in the last few years.Social Security Steve's a very important purpose socially I reducing poverty among the elderly. It serves a purpose economically by putting money in the hands of those less likely to hoard it and more likely to spend (which does far more for the economy than letting it sit in a bank that won't make loans anymore).
10/14/2011 7:30:00 AM
Great, so take it away from him. Warren Buffet doesn't need it, and the state is writing him checks for $30k a year. Lots of people do have pensions, often pensions paid by government, why should the state also provide them with SS checks? SS will still count as welfare for the elderly if it is means-tested. As for putting money in the hands of those less likely to hoard it? Warren Buffet gets $30k a year. This argument never makes sense. I know both Republicans and Democrats make it, but spending is not wealth. Keynes is clearly wrong, no amount of directed government spending will end a recession, all it can do is prolong it by worsening balance sheets.
10/14/2011 10:00:29 AM
10/14/2011 11:20:55 AM
10/14/2011 11:31:36 AM
10/14/2011 12:10:15 PM
10/14/2011 12:20:21 PM
10/14/2011 1:13:37 PM
10/14/2011 1:31:47 PM
10/14/2011 5:33:03 PM
k[Edited on October 14, 2011 at 5:36 PM. Reason : a]
10/14/2011 5:36:22 PM
10/14/2011 5:49:43 PM
^^^No, he's just being intellectually disingenuous, and so are you. Projecting your own fantasy's on someone else doesn't mean you "owned" them, it just makes you a delusional asshole. As I said, I already made my case for the bailouts in another thread,message_topic.aspx?topic=619020In short, we gave money to Wall Street to save the global economy from a crisis, with the stipulation that we would get it all back. The crisis was averted, and we got all our money back, with interest. And you say I can't do math. You know what's trolling? Pretending that's even remotely comparable to ending all entitlement programs and handing the extra money to Wall Street to do with as they please. You are quite literally the single most useless poster on this entire forum, contribute something or please just get the fuck out.
10/14/2011 5:54:14 PM
10/14/2011 6:08:23 PM
10/14/2011 6:18:12 PM
10/14/2011 6:18:47 PM
Sigh. You do realize that SS as a retirement vehicle is only slightly better than taking that same amount of money and burying it in the back yard, right? Your expected rate of return on it runs from about .75% to 4% depending on filing status, income, etc.As a retirement vehicle it's shit. Someone please explain to me how it's a good program? Honestly, the only thing I can think of is that because it's mandatory everyone will have some kind of retirement income... even though relying on just SS if you make the average median income is just a terrible idea.Please explain to me why it is a system that needs to continue.
10/14/2011 7:08:51 PM
10/14/2011 7:09:34 PM
10/14/2011 9:23:24 PM
Wait...so you mean confiscating wealth and giving it to someone else will raise their standard of living?How much was paid for that study?
10/14/2011 9:52:50 PM
And here's the problem. It doesn't matter how many people a program helps. It doesn't matter how much better the country is with the program tha without. It doesn't matter that economically bolstering the lower and middle classes is much better for the economy than allowing wealth hoarding in the top few percent.All that matters is that it takes a few bucks a month out of your pocket, and that is obviously unacceptable under and circumstances.
10/14/2011 9:58:42 PM
10/14/2011 10:19:09 PM
Fortunately, it's not about you. It's about the country as a whole. You may choose to ignore the difference in the states of the elderly in this country before and after social security, but please don't think that simply waving your hand at it is some kind of adequate response. The numbers are there in plain black and white for anyone go wants to see them.
10/14/2011 10:26:38 PM
10/14/2011 10:53:50 PM
If you don't save while you're working, I don't really care if you retire in poverty. Not my fucking problem.
10/14/2011 11:48:22 PM
^One of the biggest problems is that people are not making enough wages to live off of, much less even think about saving. When republicans continue to "create jobs" they are really creating low wage jobs that inhibit saving. GE lead by Obama's job czar is moving decent paying jobs over seas and creating 13/hr jobs in the US. The same can be said about most of the new jobs in the US. Wages have been on the steady decline while corporate profits have soared.
10/15/2011 12:47:41 AM
They can afford to have it taken out of their pay as FICA tax, can't they?
10/15/2011 12:51:48 AM
10/17/2011 11:02:20 PM
Social Security doesn't meet the qualification of a Ponzi scheme's quick returns luring investors into bigger risks or the illusion of profitability.Again, it meets part of the definition but not the entire definition.
10/17/2011 11:12:34 PM
no definition of a Ponzi Scheme requires quick returns. you failed on that then, you are failing on it now. You are getting confused with how it "usually works" with how it is actually defined. The length of time between investment and "returns" only changes the coefficients in the mathematical models. It does NOT change whether or not it is a Ponzi Scheme
10/17/2011 11:20:01 PM
A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to its investors from their own money or the money paid by subsequent investors, rather than from any actual profit earned by the individual or organization running the operation. The Ponzi scheme usually entices new investors by offering higher returns than other investments, in the form of short-term returns that are either abnormally high or unusually consistent. Perpetuation of the high returns requires an ever-increasing flow of money from new investors to keep the scheme going.The system is destined to collapse because the earnings, if any, are less than the payments to investors. Usually, the scheme is interrupted by legal authorities before it collapses because a Ponzi scheme is suspected or because the promoter is selling unregistered securities. As more investors become involved, the likelihood of the scheme coming to the attention of authorities increases.The scheme is named after Charles Ponzi,[1] who became notorious for using the technique in 1920.[2] Ponzi did not invent the scheme (for example, Charles Dickens's 1844 novel The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit described such a scheme),[3] but his operation took in so much money that it was the first to become known throughout the United States. Ponzi's original scheme was based on the arbitrage of international reply coupons for postage stamps; however, he soon diverted investors' money to make payments to earlier investors and himself.
10/18/2011 12:10:21 AM
You can argue all you want about whether or not SS meets the definition of a Ponzi Scheme in its truest sense all you want.The fact of the matter is SS has an increasing amount of people drawing down benefits which are paid by a shrinking number of workers. You can move the goalposts all you want to delay the endgame but ultimately the scheme DOES NOT WORK.
10/18/2011 7:58:30 AM
"Does not work" is a pretty odd thing to say about something that has succeeded fantastically for 70+ years and is in no real danger of failing (assuming that Congress doesn't continue to act like idiots).Of course I understand that it's important to frame it as a failure and if you don't the arguments against it lose their teeth. So by all means, please keep doing so if it makes you feel better.
10/18/2011 8:12:23 AM
^ Just because something lasts for a long time doesn't mean it can't fail.When SS started, the ratio of workers to retirees was 16:1. And the retirees didn't live that long after retiring. Now the ratio is roughly 3:1 and retirees routinely live 15-20+ years after retiring. Do you not see the problem here?You can keep it going by moving the goalposts, i.e., changing the retirement age and increasing the amount of money workers kick up to the retirees but eventually you get to a point where it doesn't reasonably work (not enough workers and/or they just can't pay what's being asked of them).
10/18/2011 8:20:35 AM
^^Older generations promised themselves your money. That should never, ever be acceptable under any circumstance. It's kind of funny to you see you defending this system, since you'll be the one getting screwed the hardest.This practice where we create debt with every intention of passing it off to the next generation is immoral beyond comprehension. I don't understand why we stand back and let it happen.
10/18/2011 11:39:45 AM
10/18/2011 6:57:39 PM