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

Quote from southall:

I think its a bit early to guess what the final details will be.

The French and Germans seem to be in no hurry, they are talking about 2 years before they iron it out all get around to implement it.

At the least i think it will include a stock trading FTT (anywhere between 0.1 and 1%) .. but who knows what the details will be regarding bonds and derivatives, what will be the final scope, any exemptions and the actual tax rate on each instrument is anybody guess at this stage.

I am concerned about the upcoming German elections. France introduced the FTT in the run up to the elections, though the socialist spiel has more traction there.
 
I posted this information in another related thread and thought I should also post it here:-

You might be interested to know that there is a new London derivatives exchange called NASDAQ OMX NLX that will be open for trading from April 2013 with initial product offerings in Bobl, Bund and Schatz futures amongst others. I have emailed NLX with other product suggestions that they are not currently offering from April.

http://www.glidetechnologies.com/trading/nlx/

If German politicians want to kill Eurex by introducing a FTT then hopefully London based exchanges such as Liffe and NLX can fill the void. Prior to Eurex introducing electronic trading in Bund futures in the 1990s the bulk of the Bund trading was conducted on Liffe. So there is certainly a precedent for such a shift between London and Frankfurt. I can't see how the FTT bloc can tax trading on a London exchange without the UK's approval, and infact it is potentially a great business opportunity for London based exchanges.

As traders, it is in our mutual interest for the new NLX exchange to be a financial success so I will be looking to trade on NLX in German derivatives and suggest others do the same. :cool:
 
I kinda hope that they actually do it, then once the real revenue will be like 10% of what they were expecting and all trading will be shifting to other locations, this stupid idea will be dead once and for all.

I say kinda, because I would hate traders like myself getting hurt in Europe.
 
Quote from RedDuke:

I kinda hope that they actually do it, then once the real revenue will be like 10% of what they were expecting and all trading will be shifting to other locations, this stupid idea will be dead once and for all.

I say kinda, because I would hate traders like myself getting hurt in Europe.

"legislate in haste, repent in leisure."

it could be years if enacted. the UK, India, hong kong all have stamp taxes. india has been talking about rescinding for years. it has never happened.
 
Quote from zdreg:

"legislate in haste, repent in leisure."

it could be years if enacted. the UK, India, hong kong all have stamp taxes. india has been talking about rescinding for years. it has never happened.

Just like it takes years to actually implement it( EU FTT seen for 2015 now ...), and plenty of countries have rescinded over the years: Sweden, the US, France in 2008( "l'impôt de bourse" had a much wider scope than the current joke of a tax )...
 
Quote from benwm:

I posted this information in another related thread and thought I should also post it here:-

You might be interested to know that there is a new London derivatives exchange called NASDAQ OMX NLX that will be open for trading from April 2013 with initial product offerings in Bobl, Bund and Schatz futures amongst others. I have emailed NLX with other product suggestions that they are not currently offering from April.

http://www.glidetechnologies.com/trading/nlx/

If German politicians want to kill Eurex by introducing a FTT then hopefully London based exchanges such as Liffe and NLX can fill the void. Prior to Eurex introducing electronic trading in Bund futures in the 1990s the bulk of the Bund trading was conducted on Liffe. So there is certainly a precedent for such a shift between London and Frankfurt. I can't see how the FTT bloc can tax trading on a London exchange without the UK's approval, and infact it is potentially a great business opportunity for London based exchanges.

As traders, it is in our mutual interest for the new NLX exchange to be a financial success so I will be looking to trade on NLX in German derivatives and suggest others do the same. :cool:

Great news! Derivatives can be created anywhere and it's good to see Nasdaq already on the ball. Hopefully they'll extend to other Eurex products as well.
 
Quote from TraDaToR:

Just like it takes years to actually implement it( EU FTT seen for 2015 now ...), and plenty of countries have rescinded over the years: Sweden, the US, France in 2008( "l'imp�t de bourse" had a much wider scope than the current joke of a tax )...


do you have a problem reading?
"
"legislate in haste, repent in leisure."

it could be years if enacted. the UK, India, hong kong all have stamp taxes. india has been talking about rescinding for years. it has never happened."
fyi The Swedish financial transaction tax was a 0.5% financial transaction tax (FTT) applied to equity securities, fixed income securities and financial derivatives between 1984 and 1991.
 
I hate the socialism that Europe has exported. Hopefully the US is smart enough to avoid these self defeating, self-inflicted measures
 
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