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Does stock market create wealth? |
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| Jan8-13, 03:55 PM | #86 |
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Does stock market create wealth?
Right: the growth happens BETWEEN the transactions. Those are the "events" Tosh doesn't want to consider.
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| Jan8-13, 04:26 PM | #87 |
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Sometimes a stock's market price has very little to do with assets or the balance sheet. The price to earnings ratio is summarized in the following link.
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/...#axzz2HQQGw3UB "The P/E is sometimes referred to as the "multiple", because it shows how much investors are willing to pay per dollar of earnings. If a company were currently trading at a multiple (P/E) of 20, the interpretation is that an investor is willing to pay $20 for $1 of current earnings." |
| Jan8-13, 04:49 PM | #88 |
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Ugh, I didn't see this before:
And incidentally, since you were non-specific and you worded it badly, the case you described was for one shareholder: You set up the company and sold the entire company to me, making me the sole owner of the bar of gold. But since I know you meant there are multiple shareholders....it is still wrong. The bylaws may or may not include direct voting on policy. If the voting is direct, all you have to do is convince 50%+1 shareholders to vote with you. If the voting is indirect, you just have to do the same except electing a representative who will do what you want. The fact that it is cumbersome for stockholders to make major changes in large companies and doesn't happen often does not change the status of stockholders. In any case, this was already discussed in detail and I have rehashed more than I really wanted to. For fuller treatment, read back a couple of pages. |
| Jan8-13, 04:50 PM | #89 |
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But over the long term, the average P/E ratio of the market stays within a relatively small range. |
| Jan8-13, 05:07 PM | #90 |
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| Jan9-13, 09:37 PM | #91 |
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Investors are smart enough to discern that a company currently losing money may not do so in the future and price the stock accordingly |
| Jan9-13, 10:13 PM | #92 |
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| Jan9-13, 10:38 PM | #93 |
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| Jan9-13, 10:45 PM | #94 |
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| Jan10-13, 01:54 PM | #95 |
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| Jan10-13, 06:44 PM | #96 |
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You don't accept the fact that the company growing doesn't give the stockholders any direct benefit. The only benefit they'll have, in average, will be to see their stock rise in price because of others investors expectations rising. But a game just made of transactions will always be zero-sum. It doesn't even matter if the stockholders have the power to change something in the company or not, if they're not getting any of the profits companies get, they can only show a profit by selling their stock in the secondary market. And again, that's just made of transactions, it's zero-sum. Anyway, I still haven't understand something. Russ, are you trying to say the stock-market isn't a zero-sum game in respect to the profits of the stockholders, or are you saying that only analyzing profits doesn't make sense, and something is missing? |
| Jan11-13, 02:24 PM | #97 |
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A. zero what do the aggregate real gains and losses of all stock traders (gross of taxes and transaction costs) sum to? A. a 5844.180% return (http://dqydj.net/sp-500-return-calculator/) including dividends. The price gain alone is about $12 trillion in current dollars so tell me again how both are zero sum games? |
| Jan11-13, 03:44 PM | #98 |
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| Jan11-13, 10:46 PM | #99 |
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| Jan12-13, 08:31 AM | #100 |
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that is beside the point - you said to use game theory jargon. The sum of the winnings is a positive number, hence its not a zero sum game
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| Jan17-13, 02:00 PM | #101 |
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Given that in economics these days questions are often posed in marginal terms, it might be better instead to ask: if a small change in the wealth traded on the stock market would create more wealth (How would we measure this wealth and who would benefit from it?). Remember that the stock market is not the only way to allocate capital. People can invest through savings, through profit, they can borrow from banks, they can borrow from friends, they can borrow from the government. The stock market favors large public companies. It is an irrelevant means of acquiring capital for private companies and small companies. |
| Jan17-13, 07:34 PM | #102 |
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yes, but all you would have to show is that with a purely private market for companies the cost of equity capital would be higher
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