www.globalchange.com Future of physical trading communities for stocks and shares. Why London will survive as an international trading center. Forecasting tomorrows trends in financial markets, institutional fundraising, commodity trading. Alternative trading platforms and the future of stock exchanges. Finding enough liquidity is a challenge for these trading platforms apart from large national or international stock exchange. Last-century models of trading and raising capital in the markets. 24 hour trading. Future of stock brokers and money markets. Challenges of daylight and working hours. ipos and future of share offerings. New trading models. Capacity to think in isolation is limited. Twitter, crowdsourcing and open innovation but some limits compared to complex interactions face to face. Contrast between publicly owned companies and privately owned. Role of private equity and influence of management buyouts. Short-termism in analyst valuations of companies. Pressures on boards and senior teams for quarterly profit forecasts. Cultural contrast. Family owned business tends to take a longer term view. Different priorities and agendas. ipos can create huge new pressures on business leaders. Analysts should take a longer term view since it is impossible to run a business quarter by quarter on key performance indicators which apply only to the next 12 months. We need to encourage longer term investment, pipelines of innovations which give greater stability in corporate …
Yes the markets can become a form of betting, but they do have a fundamental purpose: to raise capital and allow capital to flow.
I’ve already got moral problems with the way investment markets operate, so your description of a likely future disturbs me.
We now have a bad faith implementation of the noble idea to facilitate capital flow yielding little more than legalized gambling. A bulk of trades don’t contribute value to the system which is why I pulled out for moral reasons years ago despite the fabulous gains a intelligent (if greedy) person can make.
We need something new, are there any candidates on the horizon?
I look forward to your comments on this video. Patrick