garote: (cat sink)
[personal profile] garote
La and I began buying stock on the employee purchase plan the second I got my job at Apple. Two hundred bucks was automatically taken out of every paycheck I received, and placed in a fund which was then used to purchase stock. We began doing that because we had good feelings about how the company was going to perform over a long haul - years at least.

A week or so ago I was sitting at my desk thinking about this, and about the hatchet-job that the deregulated loan and stock markets have just done on the economy, and a question popped into my head. I have been unable to find a good answer for it so far. The question is this:

Why is ANYONE allowed to purchase stock in a company for ANY amount of time LESS than a year?

We have a stock market system that is basically a gambling house, stuffed with cons and shills and day-traders, clawing at public perception for the sake of a one-week purchase window, doing nothing but sucking money out of the system. This is almost entirely because they can buy stock and sell it in a matter of days, even minutes. That is not enough time for a company's real-world fortunes to grow or shrink; not even enough time for the brokers involved to get their damned facts straight. It makes absolutely no sense at all. I want to know why stock purchases aren't always, ALWAYS locked in for a year at least, allowing the company you purchased stock from to actually do something with the money, and if you want to sell earlier than that you should be allowed to receive ONLY the money you put back in, or less.

There are early-withdrawal penalties on all kinds of financial transactions. Why the hell aren't there any on stock trading?

Date: 2009-10-11 03:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] phanatic.livejournal.com
Why is ANYONE allowed to purchase stock in a company for ANY amount of time LESS than a year?

I buy stock in a company that builds products using steel. Two months later, the government imposes a tariff on imported steel, driving up the price of that company's products and thus reducing demand for them. I shouldn't be allowed to sell that stock?

Date: 2009-10-13 02:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] polyomino.livejournal.com
Sure! Sell the ticket for whatever someone's willing to pay for it.

Date: 2009-10-13 02:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] polyomino.livejournal.com
Awesome description, sign me up as your straight-man any time!

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