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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Rolling the Dice, Again

Let’s suppose a bunch of organized crime types –unbeknownst to you– put together a scheme to offer odds on whether or not you will pay your mortgage on time each month for the next year. And even though your mortgage is only a few hundred bucks a month, they found high rollers willing to put big money, hundreds of millions, on one side or the other of these bets.


While that’s a little oversimplified, that’s pretty much what happened leading up to the 2008 financial crash when the big banks had folks betting for and against packages of home mortgages. Of course organized crime types would be in big trouble if they did something like that; gambling laws in almost every state make that kind of activity a big no-no. Those laws, however, do not apply to banks, and others engaged in what can laughably be called investing. During recent decades the Federal Government adopted laws exempting this form of gambling.



You would think that after what happened so recently we would have changed those laws. You would be wrong. In fact the lobbyists have managed to block even modest reform. Dodd/Frank would have made some important changes, but it has been hamstrung by opponents who simply cut off funding to implement the reforms.  



And the gamblers have turned to the commodity market. Summer, normally a quiet time, has seen an all-time record trading month in July and it looks like August will surpass it. All the exchanges from commodities to stocks are racking up billions of trades every day; some are showing trading increases in the billion range doubling normal volume. From the high-frequency traders who are little more than pirates roaming the capital markets to panicky investors afraid to be skinned by the gamblers, the markets are crazy.  



It’s time to set some parameters that will bring the markets back to their purpose, to create capital to support our economy. Banks need to get back to banking and off the trading floor. The exchanges need to focus on their purpose, to serve as a marketplace for capital and business to meet and create growth in our economy. At this point they are too interested in the revenue created by billions of trades and not interested enough in the future of this nation.



We need to reward investors, those who buy and hold stocks. Those in the market for the long haul. They’re the ones who should get the tax breaks. Let’s make capital gains taxes gradually go away the longer you hold an investment. Let’s make the gains reaped by those who buy and sell stocks in a matter of days or hours or a few seconds subject to punishing taxes. This kind of “playing” the market generates no public benefit.



And let’s call those who bet for and against almost anything what they are, gamblers. Let’s take away their “Get out of jail free cards.” Let them suffer the same legal consequences as those running an illegal card game in their basement. It’s the right thing to do.

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