Cmuri
Sophomore
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2019
- Messages
- 1,064
Nvidia has been on fire.AAPL @ $170+ and should beat revenue
LLY over $400 with Alzheimer drug and weight loss drug in the pipeline.
My favorites
Nvidia has been on fire.AAPL @ $170+ and should beat revenue
LLY over $400 with Alzheimer drug and weight loss drug in the pipeline.
My favorites
If the rich are getting richer, by a lot, then I don't think we are suppressing their profits. And don't forget the banks. Unfortunate the disparity of income has increased.I'll have to disagree.
We also cannot survive an economy with too many regulations. If you want GDP to increase, you can't lock down the industries that can help grow the economy.
Regulation and growing GDP don't go hand and hand. The more regulations we have, the more loopholes there are to find. I'd be willing to bet >50% of wealth is built via loopholes.If the rich are getting richer, by a lot, then I don't think we are suppressing their profits. And don't forget the banks. Unfortunate the disparity of income has increased.
Up until recently we had a high GDP #.
We are in a plutocracy because of the wealth our representatives receive to vote a certain way.
I love America too!
I corrected that statement. More regulations = more loopholes does not make sense to me. That is why we need oversight. Strong GDP growth is 2-3%. I said up until recently we had stronger GDP numbers. Rate hikes have lowered it.Regulation and growing GDP don't go hand and hand. The more regulations we have, the more loopholes there are to find. I'd be willing to bet >50% of wealth is built via loopholes.
Our GDP has NOT been growing much for the last 20 years.
Now you admit we are a plutocracy. Sorry, but we really have been one for a long time, and potentially since Washington (extremely wealthy) was selected (not elected).
more regulations 100% means more loopholes. Less regulations and simplified regulations reduce the ability for regulations to get used in combination creating loopholes. The plutocracy doesn't want to remove "their" loopholes and they are willing to let others find/use them. Thus, simplify the regulations to reduce the likelihood of loopholes. Loopholes are "hacks". The more lines of regulation means more hacks just like the more lines of code the more opportunities for hacks.I corrected that statement. More regulations = more loopholes does not make sense to me. That is why we need oversight. Strong GDP growth is 2-3%. I said up until recently we had stronger GDP numbers. Rate hikes have lowered it.
This sounds suspiciously like a Town Hall post and you know exactly who will respond to it.Not utopia, but a party that stands for women’s rights, workers rights, helping the poor, keeping medical costs down, including pre-existing condition, and just plain fairness by leveling the playing field. But if you’re the 1% of the 1% then I understand.
Since this is the Stock Market thread, I shudder to think of what less regulation and oversight would do to the market.more regulations 100% means more loopholes. Less regulations and simplified regulations reduce the ability for regulations to get used in combination creating loopholes. The plutocracy doesn't want to remove "their" loopholes and they are willing to let others find/use them. Thus, simplify the regulations to reduce the likelihood of loopholes. Loopholes are "hacks". The more lines of regulation means more hacks just like the more lines of code the more opportunities for hacks.
Oversight is for those outside of the plutocracy otherwise many of those involved would have already been convicted.
Define unregulated.Since this is the Stock Market thread, I shudder to think of what less regulation and oversight would do to the market.
We already saw what happened to unregulated banking.
To me, in general, it means that there would be no rules to keep things in check. The stock market would be fraught with fraud and theft without protection. It happens even now. Think Bernie Madoff. Another example is Bitcoin, that is monitored, be we’ve seen cases where people lost everything. Look how the banks caused the Great Recession in 2008.Define unregulated.
Is that the housing recession due to government policies forcing banks to lend to people they shouldn’t over equity?To me, in general, it means that there would be no rules to keep things in check. The stock market would be fraught with fraud and theft without protection. It happens even now. Think Bernie Madoff. Another example is Bitcoin, that is monitored, be we’ve seen cases where people lost everything. Look how the banks caused the Great Recession in 2008.
www.cnbc.com
Then they haven't been unregulated in over a century.To me, in general, it means that there would be no rules to keep things in check. The stock market would be fraught with fraud and theft without protection. It happens even now. Think Bernie Madoff. Another example is Bitcoin, that is monitored, be we’ve seen cases where people lost everything. Look how the banks caused the Great Recession in 2008.
Focusing on taxes, it means that when a tax law comes out, there are an army of very smart attorneys, accountants, and advisors that pore over the language to find a weakness that wil hit the bottom line. Because of how laws are drafted, how little they are actually reviewed by people voting on it, how complex they are, and how much **** gets loaded into unrelated bills, it is inevitable they will have issues to exploit. However, it takes money to find them, know about them, and take advantage of them.I corrected that statement. More regulations = more loopholes does not make sense to me. That is why we need oversight. Strong GDP growth is 2-3%. I said up until recently we had stronger GDP numbers. Rate hikes have lowered it.
2017 also taxes vets when the goal was to NOT tax them. (fixed now)Focusing on taxes, it means that when a tax law comes out, there are an army of very smart attorneys, accountants, and advisors that pore over the language to find a weakness that wil hit the bottom line. Because of how laws are drafted, how little they are actually reviewed by people voting on it, how complex they are, and how much **** gets loaded into unrelated bills, it is inevitable they will have issues to exploit. However, it takes money to find them, know about them, and take advantage of them.
I have spoken with @SpikeUM about this before, but one of the biggest failures of Trump’s economic package was the Tax Reform of 2017. It started out with a great premise - incentivize companies to repatriate foreign earnings so that we can actually tax it in hopes that would equal capital expenditures and more jobs. Unfortunately they did not close the loophole to ensure it was spent on that and a significant amount of that money went to stock buybacks. That’s one example.
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This year’s 3 bank failures held $532B in assets — more than all lenders that collapsed in 2008 crisis
The three failed banks this year held a whopping $532 billion in total assets.nypost.com