YOUR MONEY
Not much joy on Wall Street and Bay Street
The New Year used to be
the best time of the year on Wall Street and Bay Street as Banks and brokerages
give out salary top up bonuses based on the year’s sales and
profits. For many, the bonuses dwarfed
their regular salary and often allowed for a new Mercedes or Porsche or Ferrari
or Lamborghini to suddenly appear on the driveway.
But not this year. Newspaper reports and radio shows say
bonuses will be far less than normal and in some cases half the expected
premium.
Wall Street and Bay
Street are looking at harder times as the two
life bloods of the industry – client stock purchase and sell orders, and
speculative derivative funds and other ‘plays’ are all going sour.
If the Great Recession
is over in the U.S. and Canada at least – supposedly ending in-2009 – slow
growth of around 2% to 3% has made ‘recovery’ and ‘optimism’ delusional
stock broker dreams.
Firstly, brokers make
their money as ‘transaction fees”: whether buying for a client or selling. They get the same transaction fee ‘profit’ either way, so they don’t care if the customer
is making money or losing money as their commission is by the trade. That is why the Stock Market Crash of 1929
was fantastic business for the first day or two – huge volume and tons
of trade commissions -- and the same for
every sudden ‘bust’ ever since.
What kills the
industry is the aftermath: when people have no money to make new purchases (for
later resale). The volume factor
is key to brokerages, not whether a
stock or index goes up or down!
But newspaper stock
market sections, TV analyst shows and radio market highlights are almost
exclusively designed to promote buying (of stocks/bonds/Indexes/ETFs)
and fail to mention the most essential
point -- market volumes -- unless someone
slips up.
One analyst, in a
radio interview on 680News in early February, let the truth slip out.
What seemed like a new
‘bull run’ as stock market indices rose and rose during 2012 was an illusion! Transaction
volume had dropped by up to 80% and he did not expect much of a revival in
2013. Not
with Europe still in financial limbo, China retrenching, Japan in another
recession, the Arab/oil world in political chaos and the U.S. up to its
eyeballs in debt.
With no sign of a
turnaround in the foreseeable future, stock markets will no longer be the ‘money
machines’ for brokerages as in the past.
So say goodbye to
those great bonuses.
And hope you still
have a job by April Fool’s Day, 2013.
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