What Business Is Wall Street In?
Wall Street doesn't know what business it is in. Regulators don't know
what the business of Wall Street is. Investor/shareholders don't know what
business Wall Street is in.The only people who know what business Wall Street
is in are the high frequency and automated traders. They know what business
Wall Street is in better than everyone else. To traders, whether day traders or
high frequency or somewhere in between, Wall Street has nothing to do with
creating capital for businesses, its original goal. Wall Street is a platform.
It's a platform to be exploited by every technological and intellectual means
possible.The best analogy for traders? They are hackers. Just as hackers search
for and exploit operating system and application shortcomings, high frequency
traders do the same thing. A hacker wants to jump in front of your shopping
cart and grab your credit card and then sell it. A high frequency trader wants
to jump in front of your trade and then sell that stock to you. A hacker will
tell you that they are serving a purpose by identifying the weak links in your
system. A trader will tell you they deserve the pennies they are making on the
trade or the rebate they are getting from the exchange because they provide
liquidity to the market.I recognize that one is illegal, the other is not. That
isn't the important issue.The important issue is recognizing that Wall Street
is no longer serving the purpose that it was designed to. Wall Street was
designed to be a market to which companies provide securities (stocks/bonds),
from which they received capital that would help them start/grow/sell
businesses. Investors made their money by recognizing value where others did
not, or by simply committing to a company and growing with it as a shareholder,
receiving dividends or appreciation in their holdings. What percentage of the
market is driven by investors these days?I started actively trading stocks in
1992. I traded a lot. Over the years I've written quite a bit about the market.
I have always thought I had a good handle on the market. Until recently.Over
just the past five years, the market has changed. It is getting increasingly
difficult to just invest in companies you believe in. Discussion in the market
place is not about the performance of specific companies and their returns.
Discussion is about macro issues that impact all stocks. And those macro issues
impact automated trading decisions, which impact any and every stock that is
part of any and every index or ETF. Combine that with the leverage of
derivatives tracking companies, indexes and other packages or the leveraged
ETFs, and individual stocks become pawns in a much bigger game that I feel
increasingly less comfortable playing. It is a game fraught with ever
increasing risk.So back to the original question. What business is Wall Street
in?Its primary business is no longer creating capital for business. Creating
capital for business has to be less than one percent of the volume on Wall
Street in any given period. (I would be curious if anyone out there knows what
percentage of transactions actually return money to a company for any reason).
It wouldn't shock me that even in this environment that more money flows from
companies to the market in the form of buybacks (which I think are always a mistake), than flows into
companies in the form of equity.My two cents is that it is important for this
country to push Wall Street back to the business of creating capital for
business. Whether it's through a use of taxes on trades (hit every trade on a
stock held less than one hour with a 10 cent tax and all these problems go
away), or changing the capital gains tax structure so that there is no capital
gains tax on any shares of stock (private or public company) held for one year
or more, and no tax on dividends paid to shareholders who have held stock in
the company for more than five years. However we need to do it, we need to get
the smart money on Wall Street back to thinking about ways to use their capital
to help start and grow companies. That is what will create jobs. That is where
we will find the next big thing that will accelerate the world economy. It
won't come from traders trying to hack the financial system for a few pennies
per trade.And solutions won't come from bureaucrats trying to prevent the
traders from hacking the system. The only certainty when bureaucrats step in is
that the law of unintended consequences will smack us all in the head and the
trader/hackers will find new ways to exploit the system that makes them big
money and even more money for the big institutions that develop products for
the other institutions that are desperate to play the game.Regulators have got
to start to recognize that traders are not investors and vice versa and treat
them differently. Different regulations. Different tax structure. Different
oversight. Individual investors and the funds that just invest in stocks and
bonds are not going to crash the market. Big traders who are always leveraging
up and maximizing the number of trades/hacks theymake will always put the
system at risk. We need to recognize that they do not serve much of a purpose
other than to add substantial risk to the global economy. That their stated
value add of liquidity does not compensate the U.S. and world economy nearly
enough for the risk of collapse they introduce into the system.Wall Street as a
whole needs to be in the business of creating capital for companies and selling
shares to investors who believe they are shareholders. The government needs to
create simple and obvious incentives for this business and extract compensation
from the traders/hackers for the systemic failure risk they introduce.There
will be another flash crash, and probably a crash far worse than the May 2010
flash crash simply because there are too many players looking for the trillion
dollar score. They can't all win, yet how many do you think wouldn't risk
everything, even what is not theirs, for that remote chance to score big? Put
another way, there is zero moral hazard attached to any trade. So why wouldn't
traders take the biggest risk possible? There is value to trading automation.
It is here to stay. There is absolutely NO VALUE to high frequency trading.
None. We need to bring our markets back to their original goals of creating
capital for business. It's impossible to guess how many small to medium size
companies have been held back from growing and creating jobs and wealth because
of lack of access to capital from the stock market. It's not impossible to know
that our economy has suffered because Wall Street equity markets are no longer
a source of equity for helping companies grow, it is not a platform for hackers
and that needs to change. Quickly.
Iran parades military, warns Israel
Iran warned Israel and
the United States against any aggression, as it proudly paraded its troops and
military hardware on Friday under the gaze of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and
top brass.The Tehran parade, involving thousands of military personnel, dozens
of tanks and missiles borne on trucks, marked the anniversary of the start of
the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.Ahmadinejad, in a speech broadcast on state
television, said that Iran was using "the same spirit and belief in
itself" shown in that war to "stand and defend its rights" today
against pressure from world powers.Top Iranian generals said the show of
military might should be digested by Israel, which in recent weeks has ramped
up threats that it could hit Iranian nuclear facilities."We do not feel
threatened by the nonsense uttered by that regime's leaders," the chief of
Iran's armed forces, General Hassan Firouzabadi, told the Fars news agency,
adding that Iran's response to any attack would be "immediate and
unstoppable".General Ataollah Selehi, the commander of Iran's army, told
the ISNA news agency that "us holding a military parade is for deterrence
and not a threat".US Navy war
games He and other military leaders renewed their pledge that Israel would
be annihilated if attacked.The head of the Revolutionary Guards' aerospace division
in charge of missile defence, Brigadier General Amir Ali Hahjizadeh, repeated
Iran's promise to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz if the Islamic republic
were attacked or Western sanctions halted its crude exports."If one day
the Strait of Hormuz has no benefit for us, then we will deprive others from
benefiting from it," he said.However he added that "under current conditions,
there is no problem".Hahjizadeh also dismissed navy war games currently
being held by the United States and 30 other nations in the Gulf as "no
threat to us".Iran is locked in a showdown with the UN Security Council
over its controversial nuclear programme.Ahmadinejad on anti-Islam filmThe West, led by the United States,
has tightened the vice on Iran by implementing crippling economic sanctions,
while Israel - the Middle East's sole if undeclared nuclear weapons state - has
underlined its threats of possible air strikes on Iranian atomic facilities,
with or without US help.In his speech, Ahmadinejad also touched on an
anti-Islam film made in America by an extremist Christian group that has
fuelled violent protests in parts of the Muslim world.He said US government
claims it could do nothing to censor the film was a "deception"
exploiting the pretext of freedom of expression.He called the film an
Israeli-hatched plot "to divide [Muslims] and spark sectarian
conflict".Ahmadinejad implicitly referred to his often expressed opinion
that the Holocaust never happened to lambast the West for perceived selective
censorship."They stand against a question about a historical incident...
they threaten and put pressure on nations for posing the question while at the
same time in regards to the obscenest insults to the human sanctities and
prophets... they shout adherence to freedom [of expression]," he said.Ahmadinejad's
stance challenging the facts surrounding the killing of six million Jews by the
Nazi regime during World War II is shared by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, who is the country's commander-in-chief.Early this week, Khamenei
told naval cadets: "In some Western countries, no one dares to question
the unknown incident of the Holocaust or for that matter some of the morally
obscene policies like homosexuality... but insulting Islam and its sanctities
under the pretext of freedom of expression is allowed."
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