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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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Thursday, July 30th, 2009 04:33 pm

The Geek with a .45 explains why the stock market in its current form no longer fosters investment.  When there is no real-world correlation between a company’s stock valuation and its actual ability to create value, when the board and the senior executives sit behind closed doors ignoring the running of the company while they brainstorm ways to game the system for their own gain and it works, when corporate execs can get rich on the stock market by running a formerly going concern into the ground, the stock market has become nothing more than a form of gambling for its own end.

Thursday, July 30th, 2009 10:23 pm (UTC)

To a large extent, I agree; to a larger extent, I don’t. The stock market has always been home to some of the most roguish behavior imaginable, and yet somehow it keeps on progressing nevertheless. Judging from history, we’ll weather our current storm.

That said, I think it would be a great thing if the concept of fiduciary duty could be clarified a little bit, to emphasize long–term fiduciary duty over short–term ones. When Enron was posting its huge profits and Arthur Andersen was approving each of their 11Qs, it would’ve — under current fiduciary–duty law — been flat–out illegal for mutual funds to have put their money elsewhere. The mutual funds are legally required to seek the maximum profit for their shareholders; that means that as long as you can run a short–term con game you can Madoff the system.

I’d like to see fiduciary–duty law rewritten to explicitly allow mutual funds, pension funds and the like to pass on profits if the investors have are not satisfied with the transparency of the company; I’d like to see securities law changed to allow any shareholder to have an independent audit of the company’s books (at shareholder expense); and I’d like to see prison terms for those who obstruct transparency measures.

In a sense, it would return cutthroat capitalism to the market. If IBM thought one of their competitors was cutting corners, IBM could buy a share in their competitor, hire the most ruthless accountants they could, and turn them loose on the competitor. In this environment, the economic dishonesty of other firms becomes a weapon to be wielded by their competitors.

Of course, such a proposal is just far too sane to ever get traction from Congress or Wall Street…

Friday, July 31st, 2009 07:41 pm (UTC)
On the other hand, Simon Johnson, a well-respected and influential economist, agrees that some changes are called for. I recommend his Baseline Scenario (http://baselinescenario.com).