Wednesday, June 30, 2010

The stock market casino


One institution that has significant amounts of mythology and lore surrounding it operation is the US stock market. Wall Street has made many a man wealthy. These wealth generating stories are legends. What no one really talks about is about those who lose money and are often bankrupted by the same institution. In a prior post, Baseball cards as equities, I give a brief analogy describing stock trading as an ongoing auction. What is important is stocks have no value except what an individual is willing to pay and in the end, it is a zero-sum game.

As the market has been plunging over the last week and a half, it caught me by surprise on Tuesday with a sudden drop. That is the nature of the casino. I am guessing most stock owners are in a bloodbath at the moment. This gives me a chance to outline three kinds of investors on Wall Street.

Investor #1, The Insider
The insiders are professionals who either play stocks/bonds as a profession or are extremely wealthy individuals who have the inside track to corporate America. This group is the smallest consisting (guessing here) of at 0.1 % or 1 in 1000 investors. I guess they own 15-20 % of all stocks and bonds though. This group will always make money in the end because they have the knowledge and power to manipulate individual stocks. Insiders know when a big time news event is going to happen even before a public announcement. One fictional character who fits this category is Gordon Gecko in the 1987 movie Wall Street. The majority of all profits reside in this elite group. We define this group as
those who know what is occurring.

Investor #2, Experienced, Successful Traders
This group of traders do not have the inside track as The Insiders do, but they have an idea of how Wall Street works. This group consists of smart hedge funds, individual traders and those at big bank trading groups. They consist of about 10 % of all investors. They probably have 15-20 % share in total assets. This group makes money most of the time. Since they lack advanced insider knowledge, they also lose on many trades. One subcategory of this group are high frequency traders (HFT). This subgroup uses high speed supercomputers to beat the market. What is even more interesting, HFT represent ~80 % of all trades made on the New York Stock Exchange. HFT are what control the majority of stock movement in modern stock exchanges. We define this group as
those who know that they do know what is occurring.

The initial two groups outlined above are known as the smart money. They make money off of stocks and bonds. Who do they make money from? The following group, the dumb money.

Investor #3 Retail Investors and Inexperienced Traders
This group of traders represents the majority of investors. It includes all of those who put money into mutual funds, 401ks, IRAs, day traders (yes, day traders) and the majority of part time traders. This largest group of investors is fed the normal "fundamentals" and "over the long run stocks are the best investment" advice. Unfortunately, this is not the case because the stock market does crash. Crashes wipe out a significant amount invested in this group. As I previously stated, stocks are worth only what someone is willing to pay and they do not have an intrinsic value. The "fundamentals" advice is just smoke and mirrors to convince the average Joe to invest. Smart money knows these stock truths and avoid crashes. The lost dumb money proceeds ends up going to the smart money. We define this clueless group as those who don't know that they don't know.

No comments:

Post a Comment