2.01.2010

Why Wall Street Wins

From: http://stanleybing.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2010/01/25/why-wall-street-will-win/

When unemployment figures stayed high, and continued foreclosures clouded the future of millions of homeowners, did the stock market stumble? Nope.

But when President Obama showed up with Paul Volcker last week and called for an aggressive initiative aimed at fixing the excesses in the Finance business, curbing the size of the risks that institutions are capable of taking and trimming the size of the monster banks that engage in them, what happened? The market caught a huge cold, and fell in a fit of anxiety.

And that’s why in the end, Wall Street will win this particular struggle between regulatory sanity and outlandish license.

Yeah sure, we’d like all those greedy fatsos with their $100,000 cars to take it in the ear. But not if it means trimming the potential profit we can make on our investments.

We’d like our 401(k)s to be safer… but not if it endangers the value of our portfolio, however paltry and sorry that might be. People with ten grand invested in the market will fight to the death to protect the upside of billionaires who don’t know what to do with their excess cash.

When all is said and done, our dreams are tied up with the ability to make big, greasy profits on a tiny little ante.

So that’s how it’s going to work out now. People will yell and shout and jump around and have a blast trashing all the uglies who run the money machine… and then the moment Washington tries to do anything about it the Market will go into the tank, everybody will freak out from Main Street to Wall Street and call their Congressman and the big lobbyists, now freed of any constraint on how much money they can siphon into politics, will feed the hands that were supposed to bite them.

And that is why Wall Street will win. Because We the People want it to.

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I couldn't agree with this premise more. Americans want retribution against Wall Street, until the effects could have negative implications to their personal finances. The same came be said for global warming and health care. We desire positive change just not at our expense.

The American mentality has become that someone else surely can suffer (Wall Street Bankers), and problems most definitely should be solved (public option and carbon emission cuts), but we should not be inconvenienced in the process.

1 comments:

Karen said...

The problem seems to be the degree of suffering (or reward) is out of proportion. When 5% enjoy 95% of the spoils, something has to be wrong. A rising tide may lift all boats but the yachts are WAY out in front, drowning the rest of us in their wake.