This may have been posted but,
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703558004574579903734883292.html?mod=wsj_share_twitter
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703558004574579903734883292.html?mod=wsj_share_twitter
Quote from andy9775:
This may have been posted but,
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703558004574579903734883292.html?mod=wsj_share_twitter
No worries and I too felt that, who the authors were gave significant credit to the story.Quote from seasideheights:
It was posted already, but thanks for the contribution.
Upon 2nd reading of it, a VERRRRRRRRRY interesting tidbit pops out.
Look at the names of the co-authors.
Here's one of them.
"Mr. Sauter is managing director and chief investment officer of Vanguard Group Inc."
How about that.... The pro-tax crowd has been using Vanguard's Bogle to pump the tax. Well, now we don't have the retired Vanguard founder, we have the CURRENT Chief Investment Officer of Vanguard writing AGAINST the tax.
There's another argument against Bogle's support. His company's own Chief Investment Officer disagrees with him.
Thanks for the post Andy. That would have been missed otherwise.
Quote from jksn922:
City of London reacted with skepticism to the UK Treasury's call for discussions on the issue of implementing a transaction tax, questioning whether the government was using the threat of the levy as a negotiating tactic to drive wider regulation reform.
http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=...904574593753956162742.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Quote from libertad:
HR 4191: Probably Dangerous and Destructive, But Perhaps Merely Useless
Clifford Asness
Aaron Brown
Michael Mendelson
AQR Capital Management, LLC
I had trouble reading this, so here is a place to find a clean copy
http://wealth.net/2009/12/cliff-asness-voices-in-on-the-transaction-tax/
BTW, this is my favorite section:
All of that seems pretty unwelcome and not at all what the Billâs sponsors intend, so maybe they will not and add a UK-style dealer exemption. Perhaps they also will close off other ways to avoid paying the tax. In that case, investors either pay it or substantially stop trading. If, for some reason, investors are willing to keep on trading a lot and pay a lot of tax, then one thing has to happen â stock prices will fall, a lot. Why? Because the transaction tax imposes a tax on the value of the assets, it gets paid out of the cash flows from the underlying securities.
(It may also be found here:
http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/HR 4191.pdf)
Quote from ksharmon:
terrible oregon letter
...First, 401(k)s and Individual Retirement Accounts are exempt from the tax, along with the first $100,000 traded outside of such accounts. And second, the tax on a $500 purchase of stock beyond those limits would be only $1.25.
...