Welcome to the Fight against Financial Transaction Taxes. This thread is designed to ensure our viewpoint gets into the press and directly to our Political Representatives in Washington DC. We do this by rapidly responding to pro-tax articles whenever & wherever they pop up while ensuring we don't fan the flames on this issue. Our goal is to get the volume of the talk of this tax down to zero. At risk is your livelihood. We operate in a low volume, high quality mode where posts remain professional & directly on the topic of the taxes. Please join us. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/13/opinion/13herbert.html?_r=2 Click on the Comments section on that screen & get writing.
it will come for sure - and thats good. However, there will be also assigned market makers like in former pits - and they will have a hell of a good time
massive taxation and reform of Capital Market is coming. Obama nation, that is what the country's majority voted for. However, might not see such tax until 2010/2011.
I'd suggest posting comments at the comment link on that NY Times page. The comments so far are overwhelming pro-tax.
So... as a trader and you did 50 round turns of your capital in a year, the 'transaction' tax would amount to 25% of your capital. The exchange volume would shrink a shocking amount such that there would soon be cries to "repeal the tax." Also, huge chunks of capital to be traded would find homes overseas... one can justify expenses in order to save "25% of capital" (each year, too) tax. Such a transaction tax would be just as stupid as the Stamp Act tax in Revolutionary times.
Our government has been doing a lot of stupid things lately. IOW the fact that it's obviously stupid probably won't stop them.
OH SHIT! They'll sell this to the public, easy! Public thinks all traders are trust-fund kids, or multi millionaires. The Dems have done a VERY good job with their class warfare schtick. I gotta wonder how the Obamanation will like losing all financial mkts 3 months after this is passed into law?
Of course. It's raising "somebody's taxes, but not mine". It would cripple the exchange business in the US, so can't see it sticking even if passed. They would probably have to exempt the commodity exchanges (can't see farmers and other commercials paying the fee on "food", you know).... everybody would soon be trading pork bellies instead of GS.