1/4% Tax on all stock trades pushed in NY Times today

Discussion in 'Taxes and Accounting' started by seasideheights, Jan 13, 2009.

  1. TraDaToR

    TraDaToR

    #11141     Sep 3, 2013
  2. southall

    southall

    Perhaps mostly existing positions, people will be closing out positions naturally over the next few weeks and taking a one time hit.

    Will be interesting to see how many will be prepared to open new positions in the future.
     
    #11142     Sep 3, 2013
  3. luisHK

    luisHK

    I'm not glad to see that, but actually the volume increased the following days, and has been this week in line with the volume since the beginning of summer.
     
    #11143     Sep 7, 2013
  4. bjw

    bjw

    let's face it. an ftt WITH market maker exemption would most likely work.

    it's ridiculously unfair. a measure targeted to hit the big boys, is tweaked and tweaked until the big boys are exempt. all that "let's go after the people who start the crisis" rhetoric, all bs.

    if the euro-ftt would ever include a market maker exemption (thank god no sign of that yet), then we're in real trouble.
     
    #11144     Sep 7, 2013
  5. TraDaToR

    TraDaToR

    Yes I saw that too. I don't know the italian law to comment. What is the tax level on MIB futures? I can't see how it can stay at that level if it is set at something like 0.01%, even with MM exemption...Or it means all the volume is just banks executing orders for really dumb clients...
     
    #11145     Sep 7, 2013
  6. you know, I dont think so. I think it will still play out the same way. without the retail player. These people that draft these pro ftt arguments are also keynesian central planners. they have a terrific track record of failure.

    Eventually things must turn for the better, and the way things are going, there is no end to turmoil in sight. If they push for an ftt it will fail at this point. the time to tax is when things are well. I would welcome this idea, now, so it fails immediately. we may have to go through pain, but as sweden found out, it is the worst idea ever. It will be the end of the euro as we know it, and implementing this ridiculous idea will only exacerbate its demise.

    As traders we just trade away from these markets. if they conspire to destroy the markets, cant we do the same and hold them together?
     
    #11146     Sep 7, 2013
  7. luisHK

    luisHK

    The problem for FTT based traders is no matter which market they trade, they would be hit by the FTT anyway.
     
    #11147     Sep 7, 2013
  8. TraDaToR

    TraDaToR

    OK. Just found why volume didn't drop. Check out the table for derivatives. Not sure, but I think the tax amount for a stock index futures of 50000-100000 Euros notional value is 15c. The amount is fixed in Euros and not percents. It corresponds to a tax of 0.00015%. It's like a big NFA Fee. I don't like it, it is exactly the kind of amount that can be absorbed without noticing by retail traders/ pension funds...

    http://www.borsaitaliana.it/speciali/equitymarketsnews/presentazioneftt.en_pdf.htm
     
    #11148     Sep 7, 2013
  9. I think what we all want is something not noticeable. we already have ftt in us markets. TAF. I could care less about sec and taf fees because they dont bother me even if i trade a ridiculous amount of shares.

    .1% is severely noticeable and what some brokers here in europe charge for commissions. This would effectively put government in the brokerage seat which eventually they would find ways to smooth out the tax and get people trading more.

    the market will eventually decide what to do with these things, not governments.

    I am throwing up these arguments but I am seriously opposed to the idea, any idea of new tax. taxes are created by people who dont work for a living. if you need proof, come to greece.

    At luisHK, I maybe someone who is not following the debate as closely as some of you. can you please elaborate on how ftt residents can be taxed on this if they are setup offshore and trade in other markets? i think via adrs only, right? my prop firm just rejects any orders for those symbols like ALU. isnt this taxed at source?
     
    #11149     Sep 7, 2013
  10. luisHK

    luisHK

    Actually i already mentioned the solution for ftt residents would probably be to trade through corporations set up outside the FTT area, I don't think either they would be impacted by the FTT when trading non FTT related products.
     
    #11150     Sep 7, 2013