Quote from PHOENIX TRADING:
Great reply THANKS![]()
If you're interested in learning more about the destructive nature of the Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) please read:
http://financialtransactiontaxes.com/
Quote from PHOENIX TRADING:
Great reply THANKS![]()
Quote from Ricter:
Under these extraordinarily difficult circumstances my suggestion, to borrow yours from other arguments, would be to get a real job.
Blitz USA, a bankrupt Oklahoma gasoline can manufacturer, to illustrate the consequences of abusive lawsuits. The ad shows tearful workers losing their jobs and the lights going out at the 46-year-old company as a result of steep legal costs from lawsuits targeting the red plastic containers, according to the company and the institute.
Quote from tomdavis:
You're not being adversarial. You're asking an important question.
There are two financial transaction tax (FTT) bills pending in Congress: (a) Harkin-Defazio, (b) Ellison.
The Harkin-Defazio bill would place a .3% tax on all stock and bond transactions and a .03% tax on all derivative trades (futures and options). The Ellison bill would use .5% and .05%. (Details of the bills can be found by doing a Google search on "Harkin-Defazio" or "Ellison" along with "transaction tax.")
Here's the Harkin-Defazio FTT calculation assuming the ES futures contract is trading at 1400.
1) The "value" of the contract is $50 per point: $50 x 1400 = $70,000.
2) One percent of $70,000 = $700.
3) One one-hundredth of one percent (.01%) = $7.
4) Three one-hundredths of one percent (.03%) = $21 per transaction, or $42 tax per round trip.
The proposed Ellison bill (.05% tax on futures transactions) comes to about $70 tax per round trip.
Tim Harkin refers to his FTT legislation as a "tiny tax." A $42-70 tax per round trip is 10-20 times higher than what most of us pay in commissions.
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To the naive traders who think the FTT can't happen here, it's time to wake up. That's exactly where we're headed.
http://washingtonexaminer.com/repor...ama-cabinet-slot/article/2512982#.UJwE3UbCz8A
"White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew is the favorite to replace Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, but Obama aide Pete Rouse is looking for âa Fortune 500 CEOâ to work under the president who embraced Occupy Wall Street."
The number one demand made by OWS was a tax on financial transactions.
Quote from Ricter:
It's a rightie argument when we're talking about the social safety net but a leftie argument when we're talking about money renters.
Quote from PHOENIX TRADING:
ah the soft bigotry of a non-trader.
Quote from Ricter:
01-18-12 05:12 PM
I am not a trader...