Even if I don't support this tax, I can see that with a critical eye.
That would mean more investment and less speculation. More holding and less scalping. HFT would be dead, and day traders as well. It would be different, but there will be tons of opportunities as well.
And after all, how many day traders are full-time traders? The impact would be 0.001% of the US population.
Thanks for the perspective!
I was thinking about this a lot, and how it could be good for society. I started thinking about housing, and basically came to the conclusion, is buying a house good as an investment?
(at least if youre under 50 I feel we have grown up not to not see it any other way IMHO) but is/should owing a house be an investment? vs just someplace to live.
What makes it an investment vs someplace to live? is it speculation? obviously that speculation increases the value but it also adds liquidity, if there were less people willing to speculate and make a profit/risk losing their investment in the housing market would that be a net good or a net negative?
If that "small percentage" of traders are taken out of the market, let alone the vast liquidity that the HFTs are providing, and bigger players also have to calculate for the cost of the tax in already getting in and out of shares, (let alone shorting) will that be good for investors?
The premise appears to be that speculation = bad, but first can someone explain to me how = bad, before we come to the conclusion at least?
So in theory at least, you say it will be good for investors, but if demand decreases will investors still expect the same increase in value? Will companies still be able to raise funds as easily by going public?
Can you explain, how this would be good? Would love any actual data if any is available. IMHO economics theory and reality usually prove to be vastly different, but am interested to learn other perspectives.
thanks