I suspect that investors would hardly notice the tax. Depending on the 
frequency at which they move in and out of stocks, it would likely  end up 
being comparable to a mutual fund management fee.

The ones most at risk, including myself, are high frequency traders. The tax 
would seem to be aimed at hedge funds that constantly take micro profits, 
quickly moving in and out of positions. 

Unfortunately, it severely impacts day traders and swing traders too. It is not 
uncommon for high frequency traders to have several hundred trades in a year. 
With smaller accounts that can be hundreds of thousands in volume, and several 
million dollars in volume for larger accounts. At those rates, that amounts to 
tens of thousands of dollars in additional taxes.

If politicians only consider the impact as it relates to investors (the vast 
majority), then the tax appears well targeted at Wall Street. It is only retail 
traders (minority) that are at risk of being put out of business.

The bigger impact is, I believe, what impact it would have on capital leaving 
the US for opportunities elsewhere.

If US markets are worth the premium for their stability, liquidity and 
diversity, then capital will remain and the politicians will pass the tax. If 
capital is expected to flee, the tax will not be passed.

If even just a few of the larger worldwide exchanges agreed on a tax (in order 
to leave nowhere for capital to flee), then the countries involved could reap 
huge revenues. After the amount of money that has been poured into trying to 
save the respective economies, that revenue stream has got to look pretty 
appealing right now!

Mike

--- In [email protected], Nick de Peyster <nickdepeys...@...> wrote:
>
> The odds of this passing strike me as extremely low.  So far the government 
> has been extremely supportive of the financial sector ... is there any 
> evidence of a change in the winds?
>  
> I would think this trader tax might hurt momentum investors rather than 
> traders (especially counter-trend traders).
>  
> Reason being that the momentum investors tend to count on the counter-trend 
> traders to provide liquidity.  Of the two, the countertrend traders have the 
> shorter holding period and smaller gains so the tax will hit them most 
> heavily.
>  
> So what will happen is that the countetrend traders will become more 
> selective to offset the tax.  Pre tax the countetrend trades will become more 
> profitable although after tax it won't make a difference.
>  
> The momentum investors will take a bath, because there will be fewer 
> countertrend traders on the other side.
>  
>  
>


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