Quote from JOSEF:
The tax will have the effect of putting most, if not all, discount brokers out of business.
Furthermore, with reduced liquidity. the bid/ask spreads will be vastly higher than they are today. The obvious effect of this will higher indirect costs for all long-term investors. This, it is naive to think that long-term investors won't also pay a steep price for this tax.
Finally, the real "big boys" that this tax is after won't be impacted anyway. They will simply move their business to foreign markets that do not have this tax.
So it puts the business back where it was 30 ago before the
"Johnny..Time to rub the bunyons" commercials.
Volume used to be a few hundred thousand shares a day, now it is billions. People used to buy stocks as an investment, and even some mutual funds used to charge 8-10% loads. With the exception of trading in arcades and a few local broker houses, people actually bought a stock because they thought the business model made sense, or the fund family had a long term track record.
Doesn't happen anymore, anyone with a laptop can be atrader and swing 1000's of shares a day, and I do not think that is the original intent of the stock market to raise capital to start businesses. The poor schmoe who bought XYZ because of the busines model or dividend gets nauxcious when the market swings 1000 pts in a day, and goes in a different direction tomorrow.
Anyway, if people just bought and sold "golden crosses" they would probably be better off than trying to swing 1000 shares a day anyway, and you don't need excessive trading to do it.
If they pass this tax, all you have to do is short the indexes and cover at Dow 2000. The real good news is it puts CNBC
off the air.
Tom