Month: November 2020
The Ponzi Factor: The Simple Truth About Investment Profits
The Ponzi Factor: The Simple Truth About Investment Profits
by Amazon.com Services LLC
Learn more: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B079RJHHK7/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_w67VFbCR59YZW
The Simple Truth
$34 trillion of stock value = $0 in real money
Investors want money, not value.
The Ponzi Factor is the most comprehensive research ever compiled on the negative-sum nature of capital gains (non-dividend stocks). The book is not a perspective or an opinion. It is a proof that is based on definition, logic, and it is supported by observable facts and history.
The simple truth is profits from buying and selling stocks come from other investors who are buying and selling stocks. When someone buys low and sells high, another sucker is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher. Companies like Google, Amazon, and Tesla never pay their shareholders. Their investors profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a Ponzi scheme works.
or read what Wikipedia has to say About ponzi schemes and see if you think there is any similarities with the stock market.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme
The Stock Market Is a Ponzi Scheme | by Tim Denning | Medium
The Stock Market Is a Ponzi Scheme
The stock market is built on non-dividend paying companies and this is a real problem, according to financial expert Tan Lui.
Tim Denning
Jul 3·6 min read
I am a huge believer in buying stocks. I’ve always seen the stock market as my best friend. But as I look at my Amazon stocks that have increased in price by 70% since I bought them not long ago, I’m questioning my beliefs.
Questioning your beliefs and assumptions is a powerful practice.
It pays to challenge your beliefs if you want to make more money, so you can buy back time, relax and work less.
So I’m asking myself this question:
Is the stock market one giant Ponzi Scheme?
A Ponzi Scheme, for those who haven’t heard the term, according to Investopedia, is “a fraudulent investing scam promising high rates of return with little risk to investors. The Ponzi scheme generates returns for early investors by acquiring new investors. This is similar to a pyramid scheme in that both are based on using new investors’ funds to pay the earlier backers.”
“Both Ponzi schemes and pyramid schemes eventually bottom out when the flood of new investors dries up and there isn’t enough money to go around. At that point, the schemes unravel.
The Ponzi scheme is named after a swindler named Charles Ponzi, who orchestrated the first one in 1919.”
The idea that the stock market could be a Ponzi Scheme came from Tan Liu who wrote the book “The Ponzi Factor.” (He has a degree in finance and a Master’s of Statistics, and spent his career from 2005–2015 working in finance until he quit to teach statistics and do research full-time.)
There are basically two types of stocks: shares that pay dividends (cash) to you on a regular basis, and stocks that don’t pay you anything. Stocks that don’t pay you any dividends will only make you money if their price rises. This category of stocks is where the problem starts, according to Tan.
In an Australian interview, he compares the creation of stocks to money printing. He calls the stock market Ponzi Scheme “stock printing.” The strategy of printing money is currently being used by many countries to fight the global recession, including the US. It’s not called money printing when you see it, though. Money printing has many names: stimulus checks, bailouts, the Federal Reserve buying corporate bonds/stocks.
Money printing is creating money out of thin air. It devalues the money that you have in your savings account, making it worth less and acting like a hidden tax you didn’t know you were paying.
Stock printing is the creation of more stocks out of thin air by a company. Many of the stocks going crazy right now — Facebook, Amazon, Google — don’t pay you any money for owning them.
They create more and more stocks which is fine, assuming that the stock market doesn’t suffer a sudden cardiac arrest. When stocks start going down or have a prolonged downturn like they did in Japan for the last 30 years, then things get real. And that’s when you may wish that you challenged your beliefs about money and investing earlier.
“We can be blind to the obvious and we are also blind to our blindness” — Daniel Kahneman
You Don’t Own Part of a Business If You Buy Their Stocks
Tan says that if you own a stock like Tesla you have no ownership in the company. If their stock price goes from $1000 to $800, Tesla doesn’t step in and make up the difference.
He uses Google as an example and says “they don’t pay dividends, there are no voting rights, and the par value of Google is only $0.001. So, if you own a share of Google, you won’t receive any money from the business, you can’t vote, and Google is only obligated to pay you $0.001 for that $1200 share.”
Owners of a business get a share of the profits.
If you’re not getting paid to be an owner in a company, then what do you really own? Tan says, nothing.
Stocks Have No Value
If a company like Google went bankrupt tomorrow, what would you get if you owned their stocks? Tan says you’ll probably get nothing.
The myth, he says, that many people rely on is the future belief that if a non-dividend paying company merges with another, then the owner of their stocks will get rich.
Or, like Apple did in 2012, a company that doesn’t pay a share of the profits to its stockholders might change their mind in the future. He argues that this is not fact, only hope. Therefore, your stocks have no value unless a fantasy, unlikely to happen, occurs in the future.
The Way You Make Money from Non-Dividend Paying Stocks
The way you make a profit on owning non-dividend paying stocks is to sell them to other investors for a higher price than you initially paid.
Tan asks the question “why do imaginary instruments with no monetary connections to business revenues have any legitimate value?”
Stocks are imaginary paper companies can print at will.
Look at History to Understand
Tan goes back through history to look at where the problem might have stemmed from. Stocks are known as equity and people associate that word with ownership in a company.
Before the 1900s, Tan’s research shows that all stocks paid dividends. “Stocks had a definitive profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the companies they owned,” says Tan.
The core idea of his argument is that the creation of stocks was to help investors have a share of the profits through dividends, not to make money off of the stock price in the form of a capital gain.
The reliance on capital gains is what is wrong with stocks, he says, and makes them a Ponzi Scheme.
“They reinvest their profits into the growth of the company,” is a lie
A common argument that was given to me when I bought Facebook and Amazon stocks was that they didn’t pay dividends because they invested their profits in the growth of the company. I believed this statement, but now I’m beginning to question it.
Tan says there is no evidence that backs up this statement. There is no transparency to show you that the money you could be getting paid through dividends is actually being reinvested for your benefit.
Not sharing profits with investors is nothing more than an excuse, according to Tan, and it’s an easy way for them to get rich off people who buy their stocks. There are companies like Apple that are high-growth and pay their investors a dividend, so why shouldn’t all companies do that like they used to?
Solution
- Diversify your risk between multiple asset classes.
- Challenge your beliefs and assumptions.
- Stay away from the hype.
- Avoid the fear of missing out when it comes to investing.
- Invest money in your learning to grow mental and financial wealth.
- Delve into the concepts of money printing and bubbles (like the tech bubble).
Final Thought
I have been an investor in the stock market for many years. Stocks have always put a big smile on my face and I have even grown to love them as if they were my children.
While I haven’t definitively made up my mind that the stock market is one giant Ponzi scheme, I have learned through what happened in Japan during the “Lost 20 Years” that it pays to question what you’re told when it comes to investing and money.
The idea of money printing was a game-changer for me, and stock printing by non-dividend paying companies is the next evolution in this idea.
Are we all just gamblers at a mythical casino run by tech companies? I’m still finding out.
Still, it pays to question your beliefs about money and investing, so you don’t find yourself like the investors did in Japan after their economic bubble burst.
Aussie Blogger with 100M+ views — Writer for CNBC & Business Insider. Inspiring the world through Personal Development and Entrepreneurship www.timdenning.com
Published in The Ascent
·Jul 2
“Tell the poor people to go out there and work hard for money like we do instead of begging us to give up our hard-earned dollars.”
NYTimes: Splitting 5 to 4, Supreme Court Backs Religious Challenge to Cuomo’s Virus Shutdown Order
Splitting 5 to 4, Supreme Court Backs Religious Challenge to Cuomo’s Virus Shutdown Order nyti.ms/39icuy8
For Christians the Apocalypse is a self fulfilling prophecy.
It’s astonishing that we live in a country where our highest court sides with religious cults that believe their life after death fantasy is more important than the general public’s life.
By definition anyone who makes decisions based on ideology rather than empirical data is going to be wrong at least some of the time. That’s why the framers of our constitution believed in the separation of church and state.
Religious ideologists believe that only members of their religious cult will have a life after death. Consequently, they devalue every life on a planet including their own.
They are putting our country and the world in a death spiral.
It’s 2023. Here’s How We Fixed the Economy | TIME
NYTimes.com: An ‘Electrifying’ Economist’s Guide to the Recovery
From The New York Times:
An ‘Electrifying’ Economist’s Guide to the Recovery
Mariana Mazzucato, a professor who has the ears of world leaders and chief executives, envisions a post-pandemic world that redefines what is valued.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/19/us/economist-covid-recovery-mariana-mazzucato.html?smid=em-share
Watch – TimesTalks | Yuval Noah Harari
Watch – TimesTalks | Yuval Noah Harari
Bari Weiss, Op-Ed staff editor and writer at The New York Times, will join Yuval Noah Harari, historian, philosopher and international best-selling author of “Sapiens” and “Homo Deus” for a thought-provoking evening of conversation. Harari’s new book, “21 Lessons for the 21st Century” untangles political, technological, social and existential issues. It clarifies the most important questions humankind faces today, and empowers all of us to help answer them. His provocative insights on the most pressing issues of the day have won him fans ranging from Bill Gates and Barack Obama to Natalie Portman and Janelle Monáe. Filmed live at TheTimesCenter.