The promise is that when you sell a share it ought to be backed up with a business with actual personnel with expertise, a selling point, or at least an idea for one, maybe some property or premises.Wootah wrote:Is Khalid right in calling it a Ponzi scheme?
All value and investment in that sense is a ponzi scheme - if you can't sell X for more than you bought it then you lose.
A ponzi scheme is paying off current investors with future investors investments.
What the whizz kids of the derivative market managed to do was to sell products that looked like they were based on a business idea, which was IN FACT nothing more than the idea of selling the financial product!!
The collapse of the sub-prime market was the result of the trading of these so-called Derivatives.
The current financial bubble was burst when the bluff on these products was called.
People, in the know, realised that this bubble-burst would happen and are all filthy rich, whilst the economy that provided for them is destroyed.
If I buy a share in a shop, I get a share of that shop's profits or losses. A Ponzi scheme is nothing more than buying a shop that does not exist, except on paper.
A derivative is a paper shop.
There is a difference here.
A derivative is a legally accepted fraud; a paper shop, secured on your house.