Will We Ever Again Trust Wall Street?

Discussion in 'Economics' started by tmarket, Feb 15, 2010.

  1. How can faith be restored?
    Wall Street firms need to be forthright in admitting their shortcomings. The more they protest their innocence, the more they make the typical investor feel that the financial world is unjust.

    The Pecora hearings, held in the U.S. Senate in the 1930s, served partly as a form of public expiation, in which Wall Street's leaders apologized for their firms' conduct. The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, formed by Congress in 2009 and now holding its own hearings, may help investors feel that Wall Street can own up to its mistakes.

    Finally, financial advisers need to be much less dogmatic and confident in their predictions. By admitting the extent of their own ignorance today, they would help prevent investors from feeling railroaded tomorrow.

    THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR FEBRUARY 6, 2010
    Will We Ever Again Trust Wall Street?
    By JASON ZWEIG

     
  2. When the Dow Jones is above 15,000, maybe around the year 2019. Check back with me then. :cool: