really doing my best not to let my philosophy brain rot pull a sophomore level “these things only have value via consensus and if consensus changes then you should adapt” in regards to everyone saying markets are broken - Markets aren’t broken, your ideology of markets is broken
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Replying to @Bonecondor
is there like a 5 minute explainer somewhere that illuminates the societal benefit of the current version of a stock market because I’m allegedly smart but have no idea how this kind of speculation type financial system could be beneficial
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Replying to @Puffadda
I mean the real answer is that financial speculation or activity is sometimes entirely unconcerned with overall societal benefit, but people here will be upset if I don’t mention that the market is a mechanic to match those who seek to raise funding from those seeking to lend it
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Replying to @Bonecondor @Puffadda
This is a very dumb source but also puts things into plainer English than I could have and doesn’t do a terrible jobhttps://www.quora.com/What-value-does-the-stock-market-provide-to-society …
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Replying to @Bonecondor @Puffadda
Also I haven’t read this paper apart from the abstract but I am planning on digging into it later https://www.efmaefm.org/0EFMSYMPOSIUM/2017/papers/Does%20the%20Stock%20Market%20Benefit%20the%20Economy%20-%20updated.pdf …
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Replying to @Bonecondor
I guess I meant more the algorithmic semi-instantaneous stuff. I understand in broad strokes the benefits for investment/cash influx, but I don’t get why stock purchases aren’t required to be held for, say, 6 months or a year to reduce the volatility.
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Replying to @Puffadda
I mean you wouldn’t be able to have mutual funds that rebalance more often than every 6 months, or ETFs, and you’d be saying no one could sell if there was bad news, and you’d be instituting forced buying and holding only
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Replying to @Bonecondor @Puffadda
“No one could sell if there was bad news” — arguably if we just erased the price action between Jan 1 and Jun 30 in 2020, everyone would have been a lot better off
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I sometimes hear people arguing that stock markets should be one big auction at 9am every day but hear me out, what if we just did two auctions per year on say Mar 20 and Sep 20?
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