The Ponzi Factor” by Tan Liu, 2019
This
excellent short book asks the basic questions about stock markets which are
never asked in corporate-controlled ‘economics’ classes. The first question is if the only way to make
a ‘profit’ off of common stocks is to sell them to someone else later for a
higher price, why is that not the same logic as a Ponzi scheme? In a Ponzi scheme, the earliest investors are
paid with money from later investors.
You Knew It All Along |
Liu was
trained in ‘economics’ and worked at several trading firms and hedge funds. In the process he wondered about this and
other very basic issues, but figured he was just ignorant of the real
facts. He accepted the evasive answers
of proponents of the market. But no
longer. Liu starts with the example of
Tesla, whose shares are now worth ~$300, while losing $6.3+B as a corporation
up to 2018. Yet Tesla shares do not
constitute ownership – that is a myth. The
~$300 is only a figure on a computer screen.
But for Tesla your payment for their stock is real money.
Liu details
his somewhat humorous experiences working at two hedge funds, which both went
belly-up. One was involved in buying
life insurance policies, of all things.
He began to question the logic of what was happening, which resembled a Ponzi
scheme to him.
In the book
he looks into the fraudulent nature of ‘accrual accounting;’ the data-deficient
inaccuracy of ‘positive sum’ market assumptions; the discrepancy between market
‘values’ and the actual amount of cash in existence; the very real nature of
fees; the collusion between universities and Wall Street; the bogus idea of
‘shareholder’s rights’; even the symbols used to describe cash, real estate and
stocks.
Bonds that
pay interest and the very few stocks that still accrue dividends are exceptions,
but they are not the heart of the common stock markets. Most mutual funds contain these misnamed
‘equities’ to varying degrees, and only some pay dividends, usually 'balanced' or 'bond' funds. If you 'reinvest' your mutual fund proceeds, you never get that money, only more shares. So few workers
are immune if they have IRAs or 401k/403bs.
In essence, you are paying-to-play in a casino for capital gains. But it is Capital that really gains. Liu concludes that markets in stocks must be ended. The book reveals that Wall Street is an emperor dressed in underwear.
Liu appeared
on Lee Camp’s show on RT. Look up his appearance and BUY THIS BOOK! - which is available locally right now
only at May Day.
P.S. - Here is a YouTube video from Liu on 'investment junkies.'
P.S. - Here is a YouTube video from Liu on 'investment junkies.'
Other blog reviews
on Wall Street below: “Flash Boys,” “The Big Short,” “The Great
Crash,” “Debt & Capital,” “Retirement and Wall Street,” “Liar’s Poker,”
“Liquidated - An Ethnography of Wall Street,” “The Wolf of Wall Street,” “House of Cards,” “Griftopia,” “Den of
Thieves.” Use blog search box, upper
left.
And I
bought it at May Day Books for a very low price!
Red Frog
January 22,
2019
2 comments:
I'll be checking this book out at Mayday on Monday.
Tan is a bright guy and he gives 'talks' on YouTube about finance. The one before last included how they drop out losers in the S&P 500 so that the average earnings rise looks good. I.E. if you have a group of horses, and 8 win or place, and 2 don't, you just shoot the latter and do your statistics from there.
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