1/4% Tax on all stock trades pushed in NY Times today

Quote from benwm:

Did they not pause to wonder what effect such taxes might have on financing the cost of their debt? Destroy liqiudity and watch those bond yields shoot up!

Talk about straw that breaks the camels back.

That is the thing..if you read the Bloomberg article posted above, they EXEMPT that!! No taxes on gubernment bonds!!

Governments Gone Wild!!!! They f*ck up and rack up tons of debt for socialist failed states for votes....THEN they want to tax the f*ck outta of everybody to pay for it. When they run out of ideas, the go back to the FTT which history proves is a DISASTER!!! But they do it anyways!! Germany repealed it in 1991 and France just repealed it in 2008!!! Now, they want to go back in time for more disasters!!!

Seriously, sometimes I am embarrassed that I am a human and share the same DNA as these ass clowns over in Europe.
 
Quote from Stok:


Seriously, sometimes I am embarrassed that I am a human and share the same DNA as these ass clowns over in Europe.

I know what you mean... It's hard to see a way out of this mess for mankind when you have these dipshits at the wheel.

Van Rumpuy, Baroso, Lagarde... I mean, where do they get these clowns? DSK seems the most sane one, and he nearly got had for a rape charge with a maid from Sengali or somewhere!

You couldn't make it up. If they'd written a novel five years ago about this shit, you wouldn't believe it.
 
Again, I remind that Reuters say the tax WOULD NOT APPLY TO RETAIL INVESTORS like you and me, according to the project soon presented by European commission: you trade shares, you are exempted, you trade derivatives, you are exempted ...
 
Oh Joy:

Bill Gates backs Robin Hood tax on bank trades:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/sep/22/bill-gates-backs-robin-hood-tax

Miocrosoft founder to tell G20 to back the tax which could raise $48bn a year for aid and development

Bill Gates is throwing his weight behind French efforts to put a small tax on financial trades as a way of boosting spending on development, finance ministers from the G20 group of developed and developing countries will learn on Friday.

Despite Britain's insistence that such a levy would have to be globally agreed to be workable, draft proposals from the Microsoft founder argue that a tax would be feasible for a group of like-minded countries who decided to go it alone.

Gates was asked by President Nicolas Sarkozy to come up with proposals for new forms of financing for development for this autumn's meeting of the G20 in Cannes. Draft proposals, to be presented to G20 finance ministers in Washington , suggest that Gates has been won over to the idea of a financial transaction tax, which is strongly supported by development charities but opposed by the City.

European sources said the UK had been lobbying hard for Gates to water down his draft report, which says that the tax could raise hundreds of billions of dollars a year and that Britain's stamp duty is an example of a levy on finance that works without the need for universal adoption.

For example, some modelling suggests that even a small tax of 10 basis points on equities and two basis points on bonds would yield about $48bn on a G20-wide basis, or $9bn if confined to larger European economies. Some FTT proposals offer substantially larger estimates, in the $100-250bn range, especially if derivatives are included.

-Guru
 
Did Larry Summers kill Obama's ftt proposal?

http://www.ips-dc.org/media/no_confidence_man_-_larry_summers

From Ron Suskind's new book "Confidence Men."


The book hit shelves on Wednesday September 21 - and the nation is catching wind of just how many of President Obama's progressive policies were sabotaged by his closest economic advisors. One of those policies was a financial transaction tax. According to Suskind's book President Obama wanted to push for a new financial transaction tax - basically a small tax on every stock or derivative - or whatever financial thingamabob - is traded. Not only would a financial transaction tax - or FTT - curb excessive speculation in the markets and discourage robots from making millions of trades a day as they do now but it would also raise some much needed revenue for the government which is dealing with a deficit problem.


But one of the President's top economic advisors - Lawrence Summers - nixed the idea entirely. In fact Lawrence Summers' name comes up repeatedly in Suskind's book as a person who was not only disrespectful to the President but also kneecapped most of what the President wanted to do in those first few months in office as the White House tried to deal with a crisis on Wall Street.

-Guru
 
Bill Gates should stick to what he does best: perfecting an operating system that crashes all the time.

Maybe a transaction tax on Windows. It would reduce its volatility and produce much needed revenue to fight climate change.
 
Quote from listedguru:

The book hit shelves on Wednesday September 21 - and the nation is catching wind of just how many of President Obama's progressive policies were sabotaged by his closest economic advisors. One of those policies was a financial transaction tax. According to Suskind's book President Obama wanted to push for a new financial transaction tax - basically a small tax on every stock or derivative - or whatever financial thingamabob - is traded. Not only would a financial transaction tax - or FTT - curb excessive speculation in the markets and discourage robots from making millions of trades a day as they do now but it would also raise some much needed revenue for the government which is dealing with a deficit problem.

WOW! If true, I guess that confirms what a lot of people suspected. Thank god for Summers and Turbo Timmy. Now let's just hope the GOP can elect a candidate that can beat O.
 
New record for imaginary revenues. Idiots rule.






Dominican Republic called at the United Nations today for new market rules and proposed a 5 per cent tax on financial transactions to spur growth and prosperity.

With $4 trillion circulating every day untaxed around the world in financial transactions, such a tax would bring in $4.8 trillion annually, Dominican Republic President Leonel Fernández told the General Assembly on the second day of its 66th annual General Debate.
 
A summary of [Bill Gates's] report points out that forms of financial transactions taxes (FTT) already exist, as is the case in Britain and India, "and therefore seem to be feasible even without universal adoption".

http://finance.ninemsn.com.au/newsbusiness/aap/8350969/limited-financial-tax-would-work-gates

Pretty hopeless propaganda from Bill Gates.

In Britain approximately 70% of London Stock Exchange trades are exempt (hence no relocation).

In India the STT was introduced to circumvent the tax avoidance of capital gains tax, and is deductable from capital gains:

"At the end of the year, you can ask your broker to give you a certificate of the STT that you have paid through the year. You can use this amount to deduct from your short term capital gains and get a tax credit."

http://www.onemint.com/2008/12/05/what-is-securities-transaction-tax/
 
George Osborne needs to support this tax and show us he is on the side of the poor and the needy, not the banks and the greedy

~~~~~~Max Lawson.

Shut_The_Fuck_Up.
 
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