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Global Investors' Bill Of Rights May
Prevent Economic Déjà Vu
by
Steve Selengut
The purpose of IBOR is to protect financial markets and to create
self-sufficient investors who produce economic growth instead of
government deficits. IBOR standards create transparent financial
markets, regulate speculation, and protect retirement portfolios.
Here's a Summary:
Section One: Product Transparency. All investors have a right to see
precisely what securities are inside any investment product by
accessing real time information that includes names and cost-based
allocation percentages.
Investment companies will create no multi-level derivatives, and no
product may operate in a manner that artificially impacts the
valuation of the securities it tracks. Full layman's language
disclosure is required for all risk-increasing activities.
Section Two: Regulation and Education. Investors have a right to
expect regulators to protect their interests. Specific risk
assessment for all individual securities and derivatives is
essential for informed decision making.
Industry regulators will: Provide ground floor education to all
investors; Develop standardized risk classifications and assessment
tools; Regulate/control Internet investment advice; Prevent the
development of multi-level derivatives; Eliminate conflicts of
interest between financial companies and rating agencies.
The "hierarchy-of-risk" tool compares the risk vs. reward
characteristics of all investment securities, and imposes
eligibility controls on speculations.
Section Three: Protection from Speculators. Investors have a right
to protection from risks added to portfolios without their control,
knowledge, or permission.
Naked shorting, index fund ownership of large share positions, and
all naked option transactions would be prohibited. The "up-tick"
rule would be permanently reinstated. Margin borrowing would be
restricted to non-fiduciary portfolios.
Most commodity and currency speculations would be restricted to
professionals.
Section Four: Controls of Hedge Funds. Investors have a right to
know that the same rules apply to all market participants. Hedge
funds will be subject to the same disclosure, fiduciary, and ethics
rules as other regulated entities.
All hedge fund activities, conflicts of interest, speculative
transactions, manipulative strategies, reporting, and collusion will
be monitored.
Section Five: Brokerage Account Statements. Investors have a right
to account statements that: 1) help manage asset allocation targets,
2) report realized gains and losses, 3) track cost basis and net
deposits, and 4) emphasize the long-term, cyclical nature of the
investment process.
Statements must provide cost-based allocation numbers for: Equity,
Income, and Other classifications. Sub-category distinctions (tax
status, security type, risk tier) would be required. A margin
warning-label, and payback options would be mandatory.
Section Six: Retirement Account Investments. Cost based allocation
and diversification rules, and income generation minimums, would be
mandated to prevent speculation in self-directed retirement program.
No retirement portfolio, publicly held corporation, government body,
or other fiduciary entity may own Tier Four speculations.
Retirement plan programs that comply with IBOR, and include an SSRIA
substitution option, are 100% non-taxable. All persons under 45 may
opt out of government-sponsored plans in favor of SSRIAs; any person
can fund an SSRIA.
Section Seven: Executive Compensation. Every shareholder of a
publicly traded entity has a right to share in the growth and
profits of the business in the same manner as highly paid employees.
Corporate executive compensation must never be tied to stock price,
and compensation above a reasonable cap must be shared equally with
all employees and other shareholders--- 50% of performance bonuses
should be distributed.
All golden parachutes, "non-qualified" retirement plans, stock
option and deferred compensation programs are banned, and at least
25% of all corporate profits must be distributed to shareholders.
Section Eight: Corporate Financial Statements. Investors have a
right to clear and accurate financial statements. All public traded
companies must provide independently audited financials in
non-footnoted, simplified form. Auditors rotate between companies
annually, and produce safety ratings linked to fundamentals.
Section Nine: Taxation Considerations. Investors have a right to
formulate their investment and retirement plans without having to
worry about changing tax code requirements. IBOR compliant
retirement plans would be exempt from taxation.
All inheritance taxes are illegal, returnable retroactive 20 years,
and the maximum tax on non-retirement plan investment income is a
flat 10% used to fund all independent regulatory bodies globally.
Section Ten: Financial Industry Restructuring. Investors must be
protected from the conflicts of interest that result from combining
financial institutions. All Bank, Brokerage, Insurance, and
Investment Banking crossovers will be unbundled for a less
conflicted and manipulated environment.
Section Eleven: Global Reform Investor Protection and Education
Board. A 15 to 25 member multi-national GRIPE board will be
established with representatives of regulatory agencies, investor
associations, academia, the media, and just one person each from
Banking, Brokerage, Insurance, and Investment Banking.
Section Twelve: Transactional Fear and Greed Controls. IBOR will
provide global investors with better information, introduce rules
that will help them benefit from proven asset allocation and
diversification techniques, and implement controls on both cold
blooded speculators and blood thirsty tax collectors.
Investors would retain the right to be emotional, irrational,
fickle, stubborn, confused, fearful, inexperienced, hindsightful,
speculative, and greedy.
General Note: The above is a summary of the October 2008, four-part
SIBORAP report, published by Steve Selengut, in collaboration with
Claus Silfverberg, Managing Director, World Federation of Investors
Corporations.
NOTICE: Investment Reference does not recommend
or endorse any products, brokerage firms, CTAs, CPOs or representatives. All
material contained in any article is only the opinion of the person authoring the
article. Investment reference will publish any article submitted as a way of
offering a public forum and a means of exchanges of views and ideas. Investment
Reference also reserves the right to make the final decision on what to publish, and will
not publish anything that it considers offensive, slanderous, or fraudulent.
Investment Reference cannot and will not be held responsible for any information or
content in any articles except those which it authors itself.
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Last modified:
January 01, 2010
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