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

Quote from Rantany:

I think Sarko has manoeuvred himself in a bad situation. If he persists in introducing the FTT unilaterally, he has all the other EU countries against him. If he gives up this plan, it would be seen by the French voters as another defeat against Germany (Merkel) or EU.

Could be a Posion pill incase the French opposition win.

Like the 50% top rate of tax Brown left for Cameron, it doesnt raise much extra revenue but Cameron and Osbourne dont have the balls to repeal it.
 
Quote from Explorer:

Denmark only supports a global tax

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...ng-cme-danes-on-capital-rules-compliance.html

A European Union financial-transaction tax would drive away investment and weaken employment unless a levy was accepted worldwide, said Margrethe Vestager, Denmark’s economy minister.

Vestager made the remarks late in the day on Jan. 5 in a telephone interview. “We only support a global tax.”

The previous ruling party in Denmark said they would only support a global FTT. Vestager and her party came to power in elections a few months ago in which they strongly supported the EU-FTT. Now Vestager and her party seem to have flipped back to the position of the previous administration.
 
Apparently, Sarko wants to reinstitute "l'impot de bourse" on stocks before the elections and wait for Merkel and others to tax derivatives.
 
So Sarko basically wants to do nothing of any significance, no bonds no derivatives, I bet they wont even run that tax at every stage of the transaction, they will copy londons model to the letter, then run around the world screaming we have taken giant risks, taken the first step, etc
 
Quote from TraDaToR:

Apparently, Sarko wants to reinstitute "l'impot de bourse" on stocks before the elections and wait for Merkel and others to tax derivatives.


This is still worrying.

First they tax stocks, then they go after bonds, then finally try and do derivatives. I think existing rules stop them from applying FTT to FX.

Stocks transactions can be taxed anywhere in the world because transfers have to re-registered each time there is a change of ownership. This has shown to work with the UK stamp duty model.

They might try and do the same for bonds. Try a world wide stamp duty model for bonds.

Derivatives will prove much more problematic as no registration is required for either issuing or change of ownership.. they are effectively a private bet on price changes between 2 parties and if the transaction moves to another country they cant tax it.
 
Quote from TraDaToR:

Apparently, Sarko wants to reinstitute "l'impot de bourse" on stocks before the elections and wait for Merkel and others to tax derivatives.

If the "l'impot de bourse" is anything like UK stamp duty, it is the private pension funds who pay most of it, and not the banks. I wonder how happy the french electorate are going to be with that?
 
Quote from slumdog:

If the "l'impot de bourse" is anything like UK stamp duty, it is the private pension funds who pay most of it, and not the banks. I wonder how happy the french electorate are going to be with that?

The problem is that the French people are too busy smoking and drinking wine and they want their socialism entitlements to even understand or care. Same with all of the EU (one study says 70%+ favor FTT) because they are feed lies by the socialists who are trying to take down capitalism and free markets.
 
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