The
Securities Investors' Bill Of Rights (SIBORAP): Part Two of Four
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
Two: Regulation and Education (continued from Part One of the SIBORAP report).
Security
industry regulators will be charged with many responsibilities: (1) educating
investors with respect to product content; (2) developing a
"hierarchy-of-risk" tool that identifies the risks in all things sold
to investors; and (3) preventing the spread of unregulated Internet based
investment advice offered by persons of unknown qualifications.
Additionally,
they will be responsible for:
(4)
Preventing the development of multi-level, multi-leveraged, WMFDs; (5)
requiring that all financial blogs include appropriate caveats that speak to
the qualifications of contributors; (6) investigating any "acronym"
product produced by Wall Street, and (7) preventing rating agencies from
separately rating pieces of derivative products.
If it
looks and feels like a bond, it better not be a currency futures speculation.
The
"hierarchy-of-risk" tool compares the risk vs. reward characteristics
of a laundry list of investment securities from lowest-risk, investment grade,
through highest-risk, speculation. A risk level "tier" system has
been created:
Tier
One: government securities, IG (investment grade) municipal and corporate
bonds, and US government backed and/or guaranteed securities. Tier Two:
individual commercial and residential mortgages, IG preferred stocks, dividend
paying IGV stocks, and most REITs.
Tier
Three: other exchange-listed stocks, most royalty trusts, and DJIA, S & P,
and NASDAQ index funds. Tier Four: IPOs, sector index funds, junk bonds,
options, futures and commodities contracts, currencies, multi-level
derivatives, penny stocks, and anything with a "traunch" inside, etc.
Special
documentation is required for individual investors to purchase anything listed
as a Tier Four speculation. Tier Four speculations are only available to
individuals with more than two million dollars in invested working capital and
a segregated, personal retirement programs, with at least one million in
working capital.
Note
that individuals who do not comply with SIBORAP rules would continue to be
taxed on both retirement and investment income. Investors continue to have an
inalienable right to be stupid.
Section
Three: Protection from Speculators.
Investors
have a right to protection from unexpected risks being added to portfolios
without their control, knowledge, or permission. No contract of a derivative
and/or a speculative nature may be used in a manner that could impair the
perceived investment status of any individual security.
This
would preclude the use of almost all forms of "naked" short selling
by any entity or person, index fund ownership of more than 100 share positions
of tracked equities, and all "naked" stock options. The only short
selling that would survive would be "against-the-box", and only in
private, non-retirement, portfolios.
Similarly,
margin financing in all but individual, non-retirement portfolios, would be
prohibited--- which just means that mutual funds and hedge funds would be
unable to borrow against the assets within the fund to leverage the portfolio.
This eliminates the disruptive effect of margin calls on the values of the
securities in non-speculative portfolios, retirement plans, etc.
Certain
commodities and currencies speculations must be restricted to professionals
within their communities. Basically, if you're not willing to take delivery of
the commodity, you can't trade it. In recent years, for example, commodities
speculators have been able to place global economies in turmoil by manipulating
gasoline and food prices.
Under
SIBORAP, regulators would be able to control speculators more quickly, and less
experienced (wealthy or not) individual investors would be unable to
participate in dangerous speculative endeavors.
Section
Four: Controls of Hedge Funds.
Investors
have the right to know that the same rules apply to all market participants.
Hedge fund disclosure material must be made available to all eligible
investors, and all hedge funds are subject to SIBORAP.
Hedge
funds of all varieties will become regulated entities, and their operators,
principles and officers will be required to fully disclose the processes and
methodologies that they will be using in their operations. Any form of
collusion between hedge fund operators is illegal, for any purpose.
Clearly,
in 2008, hedge fund operators conspired with one another to manipulate the
world oil market and to crush companies within the financial sector. Such
flagrant breeches of the public interest will be eliminated by SIBORAP.
Hedge
funds may not use margin borrowing, must not short securities they do not own,
and must not allow entry to anyone who does not meet the funds stated wealth
requirements. They may use covered option strategies, but cannot invest in any
multi-level derivatives.
No
unqualified person, through whatever medium, may participate in any form of
hedge fund. Funds that contain hedge funds are prohibited.
Sections
Five: Brokerage Account Statements, Six: Retirement Account Investments, and
Seven: Executive Compensation, are presented in Part Three of the SIBORAP
report.
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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of Rights,government,regulation,taxes,tax reform,Wall
Street,scandals,USA,retirement program,risk,disclosure,politics,401(k),IRA,hedge
funds,speculation,SEC,institutions,WM,LEH,AIG,GE,WB,MER
The
Securities Investors' Bill Of Rights (SIBORAP): Part Two
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...