Message Number: 700
From: Dave Morris <thecat Æ umich.edu>
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 23:16:00 -0400
Subject: Re: mind the gap
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Not being a private investigator, or the FBI, and given that they  
have been unable to identify such things in advance, I'm not willing  
to bet on it. Some stock rises are good. Others are based on short  
term thinking. And 1 year may not be long enough, it may be 5 or 10  
years before a company that was good for 25 years finally is  
destroyed. Or the company may be bought out by other companies such  
that it ceases to exist as such and thus becomes impossible to track.  
You only really find out through hindsight- when you have friends  
who've worked there and described in person what happened. Or when  
CEOs retire as multi-billionaires at the end of 50 years of this and  
reveal what they did 25 years ago.

So I don't think betting on it is the right way to resolve the	
matter. :-)

How much do you have in the stock market these days? How do you  
choose who you invest it in? How long term do you think?

I've got about $16k, though I'm planning to pull that out soon and  
put it in my house instead once the account vests (my EDA retirement  
is basically an online stock trading account). Most of it is in FedEx  
and UPS, since I heard on NPR that their stock was way down due to  
gas prices, and I thought to myself "I use them every day in my  
company and they do a great job, that doesn't make sense, they'll  
bounce back". So far I've been right, but only about 5-6% on average,  
not too exciting.

The next time I invest in the stock market will probably be to	
support a small company trying to get started. I may be the one  
starting it. :-)

Dave


On Aug 22, 2007, at 9:35 PM, Daniel Reeves wrote:

> Not sure if this was clear but I meant to propose this as an actual
> wager.  I think disagreements are much more interesting when the
> participants can quantify their confidence in their positions.
>
> (I also have the ulterior motive that we're working on adding new
> betting mechanisms, and decision/prediction mechanisms, into yootles.)
>
> Any other ways we can turn this disagreement into a prediction about
> some measurable future thing?  My position is that Dave only appears
> right through the power of hindsight.
>
>
> On 8/22/07, Daniel Reeves   wrote:
>> Dave, if you pick a stock that surges up on some short-term news  
>> I'll bet
>> you a large amount of money that it will still be up, say, 1 year  
>> later.
>>    (Does that pin down the heart of what we disagree about?)
>>
>> --- \/   FROM Dave Morris AT 07.08.22 09:57 (Today)	 \/ ---
>>
>>> You point out some potential benefits, and others have pointed  
>>> out specific
>>> examples. I agree with these, but my argument is not that the  
>>> stock market
>>> should be abolished. It does provide value. My argument is that  
>>> it's got
>>> flaws that are getting worse, and thus should be recognized.
>>>
>>> What of examples like Enron where executives obfuscated the  
>>> records, made
>>> millions to billions, then screwed everyone else when it  
>>> collapsed? Or the
>>> CEOs who inflate the value, cash out in the stock market, then  
>>> leave before
>>> the company collapses into ruins in a series of buyouts? In these  
>>> cases the
>>> stock market and the traders and the collective wisdom are easily  
>>> fooled, and
>>> get fooled over and over again, at least in the short run. But  
>>> the way the
>>> stock market works incentivizes these short term illusions	
>>> because it creates
>>> the ability to get really rich because of them. As stocks trade  
>>> faster and
>>> easier and information becomes more distant from the traders this  
>>> will become
>>> more prevalent, or so I believe.
>>>
>>> How do we fix that without removing the collective wisdom  
>>> evaluation of
>>> corporate strategies?   Though additionally I'll put my faith in  
>>> a handful of
>>> experts over the collective wisdom any day. I think the  
>>> collective wisdom
>>> lags and follows those who really understand the companies and  
>>> technology
>>> anyway.
>>>
>>> As far as short-selling companies who are pursuing the above  
>>> strategies, I
>>> think that is a good strategy, and I'm sure there are some who do  
>>> make a
>>> profit doing that... but it requires longer term thinking and  
>>> longer term
>>> strategies to do so, and the fact that we're moving away that as  
>>> a society
>>> means that such strategies won't counterbalance the problem.    
>>> Though again
>>> the stock market alone isn't the only cause of short term  
>>> thinking. I just
>>> think it's one piece of the issue, and perhaps one that could be  
>>> adjusted to
>>> help improve it.
>>>
>>> Dave
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Aug 21, 2007, at 8:44 PM, Daniel Reeves wrote:
>>>
>>>> Not only do I disagree with Dave, I'll go so far as to claim he  
>>>> disagrees
>>>> with his own position.  If not, Dave, why not make a killing  
>>>> shorting stock
>>>> of the next company to do a round of layoffs for the sake of a  
>>>> short term
>>>> boost in stock price?  The market is smarter than we think.
>>>>
>>>> Nor do I have a beef with day traders.  Either they're providing  
>>>> valuable
>>>> information to the market or they're going to get smacked hard.   
>>>> (In
>>>> expectation at least.)  In any case, they're paying a fair rate  
>>>> for the
>>>> money they borrow and no matter how little time they own a stock  
>>>> they are,
>>>> in aggregate, contributing to the investment in those companies.  
>>>> (And
>>>> short-selling is just borrowing stock, later buying it to pay  
>>>> back the
>>>> loan, so nothing slimy about that, contrary to popular conception.)
>>>>
>>>> I used to be like Dave, pointing to a litany of "obvious" flaws  
>>>> in the
>>>> market (stock market or "the market" more generally, like	
>>>> microsoft being
>>>> sucky (for me) yet rich).	But the market had a habit of being  
>>>> smarter than
>>>> me and I've learned some humility in this regard.
>>>>
>>>> As for Dave's specific allegation (the stock market focuses on  
>>>> short term
>>>> gains), I don't think that's true.  The stock price estimates (the
>>>> per-share net present value of) the cumulative future cash flow  
>>>> of the
>>>> company.  The stock market estimates that better than any other  
>>>> known
>>>> mechanism.  It is of course prone to fits of hysteria but when  
>>>> it does it's
>>>> taking a very *long term* (fantasy) view.
>>>>
>>>> That said, there are cases where markets fail and that is in the  
>>>> face of
>>>> externalities. A classic example of an externality is the	
>>>> Tragedy of the
>>>> Commons in which a bunch of farmers ruin a common grazing field  
>>>> because no
>>>> one person has incentive to ration their use of it if no one  
>>>> else is. It's
>>>> analogous to traffic congestion which is one of several reasons  
>>>> we need
>>>> higher taxes (gas, roads) on driving. [1]
>>>>
>>>> The need to tax pollution is another classic example.
>>>>
>>>> Eugene's Starving Artist is an interesting example of a possible  
>>>> market
>>>> failure.  That might be explained in terms of externalities  
>>>> (positive this
>>>> time) if the art was of a kind that couldn't be charged for by  
>>>> usage
>>>> (public sculpture perhaps).  In other words, you have free-riders.
>>>>
>>>> Eugene's Down On Their Luck example I believe is an argument for  
>>>> risk
>>>> pooling, one form of which is the "social safety net", ie,  
>>>> welfare.  It
>>>> seems that participation should be optional though.
>>>>
>>>> Clare's Parasite CEO example I'm still thinking about...
>>>>
>>>> Danny
>>>>
>>>> [1] See:
>>>> http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/06/18/hurray-for-high- 
>>>> gas-prices/
>>>> and add to the list that cars are dangerous to cyclists and  
>>>> skaters!
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --- \/   FROM Dave Morris AT 07.08.20 15:21 (Yesterday)   \/ ---
>>>>
>>>>> I'll rephrase my claim:
>>>>> "Playing the stock market with the objective of short term  
>>>>> gains does not
>>>>> contribute to society, and in fact actively harms it."
>>>>> But I do think that is true. The stock market has some  
>>>>> benefits, and there
>>>>> are good reasons to have such a thing around, but ours needs help.
>>>>>
>>>>> Stock prices can be a measurement of a companies performance,  
>>>>> but it can
>>>>> too easily be influenced in the short term for short term  
>>>>> reasons. I feel
>>>>> like it has become common for companies to trim benefits	
>>>>> packages, switch
>>>>> CEOs, cut R&D, and do other things which provide a benefit the  
>>>>> company for
>>>>> one quarter, and thus make the stock market evaluation bounce  
>>>>> when their
>>>>> profits look good for a moment, but which have serious long  
>>>>> term costs.
>>>>> The CEOs in charge, and the investors, like this strategy  
>>>>> because they can
>>>>> profit from it, then get out before the stock goes down again  
>>>>> in the long
>>>>> run.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Many people lose from this- not only those holding the stocks  
>>>>> when the
>>>>> company goes down in general, but the employees of the company,  
>>>>> and those
>>>>> using the services of the company. The stock market encourages  
>>>>> short term
>>>>> thinking for short term gain and our country has become swept  
>>>>> up in this.
>>>>> I personally know people who have had their companies destroyed  
>>>>> this way.
>>>>> I feel like people invest not so much with an idea for building  
>>>>> long term
>>>>> stability and high probability of reasonable returns, but as  
>>>>> more of a get
>>>>> rich quick theme. And furthermore computer trading and other  
>>>>> features have
>>>>> made it easier to trade shorter and shorter term with little  
>>>>> understanding
>>>>> or analysis of the companies involved. So stock values become  
>>>>> influenced
>>>>> by more trivial surface things, because that's all these day  
>>>>> traders have
>>>>> time to see. So now companies are making trivial surface	
>>>>> changes to
>>>>> satisfy the whim of short term investors, at long term cost.
>>>>>
>>>>> There was a big discussion on NPR about hedge funds, stock  
>>>>> market trading
>>>>> of mortgages, and how it led to the creation of, and current  
>>>>> bursting of,
>>>>> the housing market bubble. Part of the problem was that stock  
>>>>> market
>>>>> investing had become too disassociated from the things being  
>>>>> invested in
>>>>> and the real long term values thereof.
>>>>>
>>>>> Meanwhile most people, who work for the companies thus traded,  
>>>>> suffer.
>>>>> Ironically it's their own investment in stock market based IRAs  
>>>>> that helps
>>>>> drive the process.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I would argue that the system needs to change. Not that we  
>>>>> need to get
>>>>> rid of the stock market entirely, but that we need to shift the  
>>>>> way it
>>>>> works to put the focus back on valuing companies that have good  
>>>>> long term
>>>>> strategies, and less on valuing get rich quick schemes. What if  
>>>>> you had to
>>>>> own a stock for at least a month before you could resell it? Or  
>>>>> a week? Or
>>>>> a year? I'm not sure where the right number would be, but it  
>>>>> really seems
>>>>> to me that traders who sign on in the morning, borrow $10M from  
>>>>> a bank,
>>>>> trade all day back and forth, return the $10M at the end of the  
>>>>> day having
>>>>> made $100k, they aren't really helping society, and could be  
>>>>> actually
>>>>> harming it in some real and significant ways.
>>>>>
>>>>> Of course part of this also is changing the attitudes of people  
>>>>> and
>>>>> whether they should be looking to get rich quick at any  
>>>>> expense, or
>>>>> whether they should be looking to help themselves, and  
>>>>> incidentally also
>>>>> society, in the long run. But from a top down approach at least  
>>>>> we can put
>>>>> in mechanisms that are designed to encourage the latter instead  
>>>>> of the
>>>>> former. We can't force anything, and I wouldn't want that level of
>>>>> government control, but right now I feel like we strong  
>>>>> encouragements to
>>>>> the opposite of what we want.
>>>>>
>>>>> In the meantime I'll make sure that my company is never  
>>>>> publicly traded so
>>>>> I don't have to worry about it. :-)
>>>>>
>>>>> Dave
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Aug 20, 2007, at 1:29 PM, Kevin Lochner wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> I have to take issue with Dave Morris re: "Playing the stock  
>>>>>> market does
>>>>>> not contribute to society."
>>>>>> Not only does a company's stock price influence its access to  
>>>>>> capital,
>>>>>> but the respective stock prices of all companies provide  
>>>>>> information
>>>>>> about the state of the economy that a ceo or entrepeneur may  
>>>>>> use in
>>>>>> making strategic corporate decisions.  Stock prices are	
>>>>>> determined
>>>>>> primarily by people who are "playing the stock market".
>>>>>> Investing in new companies does. It's a fine line, but
>>>>>>> I think we've gotten too much separation of rich and poor in  
>>>>>>> our society
>>>>>>> because of the way our stock market currently operates, and  
>>>>>>> that could
>>>>>>> use some correction.  I agree that inheritance taxes are good  
>>>>>>> as well,
>>>>>>> to help prevent too many generations of people staying rich  
>>>>>>> for free.
>>>>>>> But we should try to reign in the various tricks which exist  
>>>>>>> to leverage
>>>>>>> large sums of cash into even larger sums via short term  
>>>>>>> tricks in
>>>>>>> business and stocks without actually contributing anything.    
>>>>>>> Not only
>>>>>>> do they take funds from people with less, they hurt the  
>>>>>>> country overall.
>>>>>>> But he is also correct- there's a wide variance of skill and  
>>>>>>> motivation
>>>>>>> in people, so there should be a wide variance in income  
>>>>>>> levels. I'd
>>>>>>> accept a factor of 100 variance from top to bottom in salary  
>>>>>>> as a
>>>>>>> reasonable maximum in relative value to society that a person  
>>>>>>> could be.
>>>>>>> Some people bust their asses continuously to help the world.  
>>>>>>> Some people
>>>>>>> actively try to live off of others without contributing  
>>>>>>> anything.    I
>>>>>>> do have a problem with the factor of 1000 or 10000 variances  
>>>>>>> that
>>>>>>> sometimes occur, but those are obvious flaws that are  
>>>>>>> difficult to
>>>>>>> correct.
>>>>>>> Interesting to consider. :-)
>>>>>>> Dave
>>>>>>> On Aug 20, 2007, at 10:16 AM, Daniel Reeves wrote:
>>>>>>>> We've been debating this essay
>>>>>>>> http://www.paulgraham.com/gap.html
>>>>>>>> and I thought I'd move it to improvetheworld...
>>>>>>>> I'll start:  Graham is so right!  The income gap between the  
>>>>>>>> rich and
>>>>>>>> the poor is wonderful!
>>>>>>>> Actually it started more as a debate about the nature of  
>>>>>>>> capitalism and
>>>>>>>> interest ("why should money 'grow'?").  Here was the gist:
>>>>>>>> * [the economy] is a zero-sum game, isn't it?
>>>>>>>> - no
>>>>>>>> * those earning money are taking it away, even if only  
>>>>>>>> indirectly, from
>>>>>>>> other people, no?
>>>>>>>> - no, not if you think in terms of wealth (wealth = stuff  
>>>>>>>> you want,
>>>>>>>> money = way to transfer wealth)
>>>>>>>> * Or am I totally simplifying the haves vs. the have-nots  
>>>>>>>> with my pie
>>>>>>>> metaphor?
>>>>>>>> - yes, that's precisely the Daddy Model of Wealth!
>>>>>>>> * Is it THEORETICALLY possible for no one to owe any money  
>>>>>>>> at all in
>>>>>>>> this
>>>>>>>> world, i.e., that everyone just has money that "grows"? Or  
>>>>>>>> does money
>>>>>>>> only grow if it is taken away from others?
>>>>>>>> - You're right, not possible, but for the opposite reason of  
>>>>>>>> what you
>>>>>>>> seem
>>>>>>>> to be suggesting.  You grow money by giving it to someone  
>>>>>>>> (lending it),
>>>>>>>> not by taking it away.
>>>>>>>> It even got a bit heated, along the lines of "Trixie, I  
>>>>>>>> don't think
>>>>>>>> it's right for you to lash out against capitalistic/ 
>>>>>>>> yootlicious ideas
>>>>>>>> without grokking the answers to your questions [above]".
>>>>>>>> Oh, and I offered a yootle to the first person who could  
>>>>>>>> answer the
>>>>>>>> quasiphilosophical question why money *should* grow, with  
>>>>>>>> the hint that
>>>>>>>> it has to do with human mortality.  I believe that's the  
>>>>>>>> only reason
>>>>>>>> that holds in all circumstances.
>>>>>>>> In any case, Trixie wanted to resume the debate and this is  
>>>>>>>> clearly the
>>>>>>>> place to do it!
>>>>>>>> DO NOT CHANGE THE SUBJECT LINE WHEN YOU REPLY (so it's easy  
>>>>>>>> for those
>>>>>>>> not interested in this debate to delete the whole thread).
>>>>>>>> Ok, go!
>>>>>>>> Danny
>>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>>> http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/dreeves  - -	
>>>>>>>> search://"Daniel Reeves"
>>>>>>>> "Everything that can be invented has been invented."
>>>>>>>> -- Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents,  
>>>>>>>> 1899.
>>>>>>> Dave Morris
>>>>>>> cell: 734-476-8769
>>>>>>> http://www-personal.umich.edu/~thecat/
>>>>>
>>>>> Dave Morris
>>>>> cell: 734-476-8769
>>>>> http://www-personal.umich.edu/~thecat/
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/dreeves  - -  search://"Daniel  
>>>> Reeves"
>>>>
>>>> "Try identifying the problem and then solving it."
>>>>  -- suggestion from Dilbert's boss
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> Dave Morris
>>> cell: 734-476-8769
>>> http://www-personal.umich.edu/~thecat/
>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/dreeves  - -  search://"Daniel  
>> Reeves"
>>
>> "Backup not found. (A)bort (R)etry (T)ake down the entire network:"
>>
>>
>
>
> -- 
> http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/dreeves  - -	search://"Daniel Reeves"
>
>

Dave Morris
cell: 734-476-8769
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~thecat/



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  Not being a private investigator , or the FBI, and given that they have been
unable to identify  such things in advance, I'm not willing to bet on it. Some
stock  rises are good. Others are based on short term thinking. And 1 year  may
not be long enough, it may be 5 or 10 years before a company that  was good for
25 years finally is destroyed. Or the company may be bought  out by other
companies such that it ceases to exist as such and thus  becomes impossible to
track. You only really find out through hindsight - when you have friends
who've worked there and described in person  what happened. Or when CEOs retire
as multi-billionaires at the end  of 50 years of this and reveal what they did
25 years ago.	 So I don't think betting on it  is the right way to resolve
the matter. :-)     How much do you have in the stock  market these days? How
do you choose who you invest it in? How long  term do you think?     I've got
about $16k, though I 'm planning to pull that out soon and put it in my house
instead once the  account vests (my EDA retirement is basically an online stock
trading  account). Most of it is in FedEx and UPS, since I heard on NPR that 
their stock was way down due to gas prices, and I thought to myself  "I use
them every day in my company and they do a great job, that doesn 't make sense,
they'll bounce back". So far I've been right, but only	about 5-6% on average,
not too exciting.     The next time I invest in the  stock market will probably
be to support a small company trying to get  started. I may be the one starting
it. :-)     Dave	On Aug 22,  07, at 9:35 PM, Daniel Reeves wrote:    Not
sure if this was clear but I meant to propose this  as an actual  wager. =A0  I
think disagreements are much  more interesting when the  participants can 
quantify their confidence in their positions.	  (I also have	the ulterior
motive that we're working on adding new  betting mechanisms, and
decision/prediction mechanisms , into yootles.)     Any other ways we can turn
this disagreement  into a prediction about  some measurable  future thing? =A0 
 My position is that Dave only appears	right through the power of hindsight.  
     On 8/22/07, Daniel  Reeves < dreeves Æ umich.edu > wrote:    
Dave, if you pick a stock that	surges up on some short-term news I'll bet  you
a large amount of money that it will still be up , say, 1 year later.	=A0=A0 
(Does that pin down the heart  of what we disagree about?)     --- \/  =A0 
FROM Dave Morris AT 07.08.22  :57 (Today)  =A0	\/  ---        You point out
some potential	benefits, and others have pointed out specific	examples. I
agree with these, but my argument is not that  the stock market  should be
abolished. It does  provide value. My argument is that it's got  flaws that are
getting worse, and thus should be recognized .	   What of examples like Enron
where executives obfuscated  the records, made	millions to billions , then
screwed everyone else when it collapsed? Or the  CEOs who inflate the value,
cash out in the stock market , then leave before  the company collapses  into
ruins in a series of buyouts? In these cases the   stock market and the traders
and the  collective wisdom are easily fooled, and  get fooled over and over
again, at least in the short  run. But the way the  stock market works 
incentivizes these short term illusions because it creates   the ability to get
really rich because  of them. As stocks trade faster and  easier and 
information becomes more distant from the traders this will become   more
prevalent, or so I believe .	 How do we fix that without removing the
collective wisdom  evaluation of  corporate strategies?  =A0  Though
additionally I'll put my  faith in a handful of  experts over the  collective
wisdom any day. I think the collective wisdom  lags and follows those who
really understand the companies  and technology  anyway.     As far as
short-selling companies who are pursuing the  above strategies, I  think that
is a  good strategy, and I'm sure there are some who do make a	profit doing
that... but it requires longer term thinking  and longer term  strategies to do
 so, and the fact that we're moving away that as a society  means that such
strategies won't counterbalance the problem .  =A0  Though again   the stock
market alone isn't the only  cause of short term thinking. I just  think it 's
one piece of the issue, and perhaps one that could be adjusted to   help
improve it.	Dave	       On Aug 21,  07, at 8:44 PM, Daniel Reeves wrote:
      Not only do I disagree with Dave, I'll go so far as to  claim he
disagrees  with his own position. =A0  If not, Dave, why not make a killing 
shorting stock	of the next company to do a round  of layoffs for the sake of a
short term  boost in stock price? =A0  The market is smarter than we think .   
 Nor do I have a beef with day traders. =A0  Either they're providing valuable 
 information to the market or they 're going to get smacked hard. =A0	(In 
expectation at least.) =A0  In any case, they're paying a fair	rate for the 
money they borrow and no matter how  little time they own a stock they are,  in
aggregate , contributing to the investment in those companies.	(And 
short-selling is just borrowing stock , later buying it to pay back the  loan,
so nothing  slimy about that, contrary to popular conception.)	   I used to 
be like Dave, pointing to a litany of "obvious" flaws in the   market (stock
market or "the market " more generally, like microsoft being  sucky (for me)
yet rich). =A0	But the market had a habit of being  smarter than  me and I've
learned some humility  in this regard.	   As for Dave's specific allegation 
(the stock market focuses on short term  gains), I don't think that's true. =A0
 The stock price estimates  (the  per-share net present value of) the 
cumulative future cash flow of the  company. =A0  The stock market  estimates
that better than any other known  mechanism. =A0   It is of course prone to
fits of hysteria but when it does it 's  taking a very *long term*  (fantasy)
view.	  That said, there are cases where markets fail and that  is in the
face of  externalities. A classic example  of an externality is the Tragedy of
the  Commons in which a bunch of farmers ruin a common grazing	field because
no  one person has  incentive to ration their use of it if no one else is. It
's  analogous to traffic congestion which  is one of several reasons we need 
higher taxes  (gas, roads) on driving. [1]     The need to tax pollution is
another  classic example.     Eugene's Starving Artist is an interesting 
example of a possible market  failure. =A0  That might be explained  in terms
of externalities (positive this  time) if the art was of a kind that couldn't
be charged  for by usage  (public sculpture perhaps ). =A0  In other words ,
you have free-riders.	  Eugene's Down On Their Luck example  I believe is an
argument for risk  pooling, one  form of which is the "social safety net", ie,
welfare. =A0  It  seems that participation should be optional though .	  
Clare's Parasite CEO example I'm still thinking about ...     Danny	[1]
See:   http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/06/18/hurray-for-high
-gas-prices/   and add to the list that cars  are dangerous to cyclists and
skaters!	--- \/	=A0  FROM Dave Morris AT 07.08.20  :21 (Yesterday)  =A0
 \/  ---	I'll rephrase my claim :  "Playing the stock market with the 
objective of short term gains does not	contribute to society, and in fact
actively harms it."  But I do think that is true. The stock market has some 
benefits, and there  are good reasons  to have such a thing around, but ours
needs help.	Stock prices  can be a measurement of a companies performance,
but it can   too easily be influenced in the short  term for short term
reasons. I feel  like it has  become common for companies to trim benefits
packages, switch   CEOs, cut R&D, and do other things  which provide a
benefit the company for  one quarter, and thus make the stock market evaluation
 bounce when their  profits look good  for a moment, but which have serious
long term costs.  The CEOs in charge, and the investors, like this strategy 
because they can  profit from it , then get out before the stock goes down
again in the long  run.        Many people lose from this- not only those
holding the  stocks when the  company goes down in general , but the employees
of the company, and those  using the services of the company. The stock market
encourages  short term	thinking for short term gain  and our country has
become swept up in this.  I personally know people who have had their companies
 destroyed this way.  I feel like people  invest not so much with an idea for
building long term  stability and high probability of reasonable returns , but
as more of a get  rich quick theme . And furthermore computer trading and other
features have	made it easier to trade shorter and  shorter term with little
understanding  or analysis  of the companies involved. So stock values become
influenced   by more trivial surface things, because  that's all these day
traders have  time to see . So now companies are making trivial surface changes
to  satisfy the whim of short term investors, at long term  cost.     There was
a big discussion on NPR about hedge funds, stock  market trading  of mortgages,
and how it led	to the creation of, and current bursting of,  the housing
market bubble. Part of the problem was that  stock market  investing had become
too disassociated  from the things being invested in  and the real long term
values thereof.     Meanwhile most people, who work for the companies thus
traded, suffer .  Ironically it's their own investment	in stock market based
IRAs that helps  drive the process.	So I would argue  that the system needs
to change. Not that we need to get  rid of the stock market entirely, but that
we need to  shift the way it  works to put the focus back on  valuing companies
that have good long term  strategies, and less on valuing get rich quick
schemes . What if you had to  own a stock for  at least a month before you
could resell it? Or a week? Or	a year? I'm not sure where the right number
would be , but it really seems	to me that traders  who sign on in the morning,
borrow $10M from a bank,  trade all day back and forth, return the $10M at the
end  of the day having	made $100k, they aren't really	helping society, and
could be actually  harming it in some real and significant ways .     Of course
part of this also is changing the attitudes  of people and  whether they should
 be looking to get rich quick at any expense, or  whether they should be
looking to help themselves, and  incidentally also  society, in the long run.
But  from a top down approach at least we can put  in mechanisms that are
designed to encourage the latter  instead of the  former. We can't force
anything , and I wouldn't want that level of  government control, but right now
I feel like we strong encouragements to   the opposite of what we want.     In
the meantime  I'll make sure that my company is never publicly traded so   I
don't have to worry about it. :-)     Dave		On Aug 20, 2007, at
1:29 PM, Kevin	Lochner wrote:	     I have to take  issue with Dave Morris re:
"Playing the stock market does	not contribute to society."  Not only does a
company's stock price influence its access  to capital,  but the respective
stock prices  of all companies provide information  about the  state of the
economy that a ceo or entrepeneur may use in  making strategic corporate
decisions. =A0	Stock prices are determined   primarily by people who are 
"playing the stock market".  Investing in new  companies does. It's a fine
line, but    I think we've gotten too much separation  of rich and poor in our
society  because of  the way our stock market currently operates, and that
could  use some correction. =A0  I agree that inheritance taxes  are good as
well,  to help prevent	too many generations of people staying rich for free. 
But we should try to reign in the various tricks which	exist to leverage 
large sums of cash  into even larger sums via short term tricks in  business
and stocks without actually contributing anything .  =A0  Not only   do they
take funds from people with  less, they hurt the country overall.  But he is 
also correct- there's a wide variance of skill and motivation	in people, so
there should be a wide	variance in income levels. I'd	accept a factor  of 100
variance from top to bottom in salary as a  reasonable maximum in relative
value to society that a  person could be.  Some people bust their asses 
continuously to help the world. Some people  actively try to live off of others
without contributing  anything. =A0 =A0   I  do have a problem with the factor 
of 1000 or 10000 variances that  sometimes occur, but those are obvious flaws
that are difficult to	correct.  Interesting to  consider. :-)  Dave  On Aug
20, 2007, at 10:16 AM, Daniel Reeves wrote :	We've been debating  this essay
  http://www.paulgraham.com/gap.html	and I thought I'd move it to
improvetheworld ...  I'll start: =A0  Graham is so right! =A0  The income gap
between the rich  and  the poor is wonderful!  Actually it started more as a
debate about the nature  of capitalism and  interest  ("why should money
'grow'?"). =A0	 Here was the gist:  * [the economy ] is a zero-sum game, isn't
it?  - no   * those earning money are taking it away, even if  only indirectly,
from  other people, no ?  - no, not if you think in terms of  wealth (wealth
=3D stuff you want,  money =3D way  to transfer wealth)  * Or am I totally 
simplifying the haves vs. the have-nots with my pie  metaphor?	- yes, that's
precisely  the Daddy Model of Wealth!  * Is it THEORETICALLY  possible for no
one to owe any money at all in	this  world, i.e., that  everyone just has
money that "grows"? Or does money  only grow if it is taken away from others? 
- You're right, not possible, but for the opposite reason  of what you	seem 
to be suggesting. =A0  You grow money by giving it to  someone (lending it), 
not by taking it  away.  It even got a bit heated, along the  lines of "Trixie,
I don't think  it's right for  you to lash out against capitalistic/yootlicious
ideas  without grokking the answers to your questions  [above]".  Oh, and I
offered a yootle to the  first person who could answer the  quasiphilosophical
question why money *should* grow, with the hint that   it has to do with human
mortality . =A0  I believe that 's the only reason  that holds in all
circumstances .  In any case, Trixie wanted to resume  the debate and this is
clearly the  place to do  it!  DO NOT CHANGE THE SUBJECT LINE WHEN  YOU REPLY
(so it's easy for those  not interested  in this debate to delete the whole
thread).  Ok, go!  Danny  --   http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people /dreeves  =A0  -
 - =A0	search://"Daniel Reeves "  "Everything that can be invented has  been
invented."  -- Charles H. Duell, Commissioner , U.S. Office of Patents, 1899.  
 Dave Morris  cell:  4-476-8769   http://www-personal.umich.edu /~thecat/      
  Dave Morris	cell: 734-476-8769   http://www-personal.umich.edu /~thecat/   
	  --   http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people /dreeves  =A0  -  - =A0 
search://"Daniel Reeves "     "Try identifying the problem and then solving it
."   =A0 -- suggestion from Dilbert's boss		   Dave Morris	 cell:
734-476-8769   http://www-personal.umich.edu /~thecat/		    --	
http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people /dreeves  =A0  -  - =A0  search://"Daniel
Reeves "     "Backup not found. (A)bort (R)etry (T)ake down the entire 
network:"		 -- =A0    http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people /dreeves 
=A0  -	- =A0  search://"Daniel Reeves "		 Dave Morris   cell:
734-476-8769   http://www-personal.umich.edu /~thecat/		   
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