Securities
Investors' Bill Of Rights (SIBORAP): Part One of Four
We the
securities investors of the United States, in order to form more transparent
financial markets, establish effective regulations, defend against destructive
speculation and manipulation, promote financial well-being, preserve working
capital, and protect retirement income, do establish this Securities Investors
Bill of Rights and Protections (SIBORAP).
These
rights are intended to replace, amend and/or abolish all laws and regulations
currently in conflict with SIBORAP, and are to be implemented by all parties to
financial transactions.
Any
institutional efforts to create and/or market securities and/or derivative
products that do not comply with the spirit of SIBORAP will result in fines to
corporate officers and directors, congressional oversight committee members,
regulatory agency directors, and their financial or legal counsel.
All
derivative investment products of any kind, any investment programs or specific
recommendations promoted in any medium by non-professionals and professionals
alike, SEC registered or not, must comply with SIBORAP. Any non-plain-vanilla
security, or derivative product containing college-level mathematical
complexity, must comply with SIBORAP.
If the
average investor cannot understand the purpose of the security, view its
content, and form valid expectations about its market value and/or income
generation performance in varying market environments--- that security should
not be purchased by that person, and must not be sold to him.
It is
important that the regulatory bodies responsible for implementing SIBORAP
include non Wall Street representatives in their advisory committees. Any and
all financial products, contracts, options, and programs approved by regulators
will be given a layman's language risk assessment.
All
producers of derivative products must provide regulators with clear written
documentation of the specific risks involved, in layman's terms. Regulators
will label derivatives as to risk "tier level", and identify the
entities, persons, and programs prohibited from purchasing them.
The
primary purpose of SIBORAP is to protect investors from the actions of others
by lessening the global impact of specific types of transactions. A secondary
objective is to protect the majority of investors from themselves.
SIBORAP
includes these ten specific sections: (1) Product Transparency, (2) Regulation
and Education, (3) Protection from Speculators (4) Control of Hedge Funds, (5)
Brokerage Account Statements, (6) Retirement Account Investments, (7) Executive
Compensation, (8) Corporate Financial Statements, (9) Taxation of Investment
and Retirement Income, and (10) Transactional Greed and Fear Controls.
Section
One: Product Transparency.
All
individual investors, regardless of size, tax status, or educational
achievement have the right to see precisely what securities are inside any
investment product they purchase, and not only in terms of the top ten
positions and asset allocation. All securities within the portfolio must be
visible electronically, and updated daily. The top ten holdings would typically
represent less than 30% of the portfolio.
Investment
Companies shall create no products that contain more than one level of content
identification, or whose make-up would artificially or inappropriately impact
the market valuation of the securities it contains. A product containing
individual negotiable securities of any kind, either equity or income based,
may not become a part of any other product or publicly traded security.
This
rule would outlaw all multi-level derivatives such as funds-of-funds, index
funds that purchase more than 100 shares of the stocks they track, CDOs, and
other multi-level gambling devices so popular within the derivative markets.
It will
also allow shareholders and regulators to see if any illegal or undisclosed
activities or processes are being used in-between standard reporting periods.
(Note that funds, corporations, and brokerage firms would no longer be required
to send quarterly or annual reports to anyone, so long as the documents are
available on line.)
Full
disclosure, always in laymen's terms, is required for all
gain-enhancing/risk-increasing activities such as leverage, options, and
futures transactions.
Section
Two: Regulation and Education.
Since
the investor community has grown to include nearly all employed persons, and
because such persons may have a limited understanding of investing, they have
the right to expect government regulators to protect their interests.
Incidentally,
and because approximately 99.9% of "middle class" members are
investors, the tax rules associated with SIBORAP Section Nine will be effective
retroactive to the 2007 tax year--- for middle class families and small
business taxpayers only. The resultant tax credit will be applied to
withholding taxes.
A
well-regulated securities industry is needed to assure that the risks
associated with securities are clearly identified and labeled. Investors have
the right to clear, non-legalese, explanations of risk, particularly when their
selections involve other than stocks and bonds.
Specific
risk assessment for individual securities and derivatives (securities whose
value depends upon the value of other securities) is more important than
disclosure of company operations and affiliations. If Registered Investment
Advisors (RIAs) have no weapons of mass financial destruction (WMFDs) to sell,
no mass financial destruction will recur.
Section
Two (Regulation and Education) is continued in Part Two of the SIBORAP report.
Part Two also includes Sections Three (Protection from Speculators) and Four
(Control of Hedge Funds).
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Professional
Investment Management from 1979
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
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Street,scandals,USA,retirement
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The
Securities Investors' Bill Of Rights (SIBORAP): Part One
We the
securities investors of the United States, in order to form more transparent
financial markets, establish effective regulations, defend against destructive
speculation and manipulation, promote financial well-being, preserve working
capital, and protect retirement income...