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Award page Items you need to improve and protect your FCM or IB...
1.
Very important and useful forms and letters for
different applications for the FCM and the Introducing Broker. Visit our
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The Securities Investors' Bill Of Rights (SIBORAP):
Part Four of Four
by
Steve Selengut
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 Seven: Executive Compensation - continued from Part Three of
the SIBORAP report.
Every dollar paid to corporate executives, directors, and employees
(in any form whatsoever) in excess of two million dollars would be
matched by a ten-cent per share extra dividend to all shareholders
and a 10%-of-annual-pay bonus to all employees.
All golden parachutes, separate "non-qualified" retirement plans,
stock option and deferred compensation programs, and others that do
not benefit all employees and shareholders will be unwound over a
three to five year period. Any employee who receives in excess of
$250,000 in compensation must buy (and retain while employed by the
company plus 3 years) 10 common shares for each $1,000 of his or her
highest career compensation--- retroactive three years.
Under SIBORAP, any corporation that reports profits in any year, or
that pays performance-based bonuses to any employee, must first pay
a "bonus" dividend to its shareholders equal to no less than 25% of
the profits and proposed bonuses.
Section Eight: Corporate Financial Statements.
Investors have a right to have confidence in the numbers presented
in corporate financial statements. SIBORAP mandates that all
publicly traded companies employ an independent auditing firm to:
translate company financials into simplified documents
comprehensible to non-accountants.
These auditors would be rotated among similar companies and
industries, with at least three years between appearances at any one
company. Their compensation would be a flat rate plus rewards for
identifying inaccuracies, inappropriate practices, and outright
fraud. Executives in the chain of command from where the problems
were found would be personally responsible for the rewards paid to
the auditors.
Auditors would rank the financial status of companies based upon
cash flow data, debt to equity ratios, operating profitability,
industry trends, and other fundamental indicators of value.
Section Nine: Taxation Considerations.
The current tax code encourages, even dictates, investment errors,
and creates a larger burden on all levels of government than is
necessary. Investors have a right to formulate their investment and
retirement plans without having to worry about changing tax code
requirements.
Ironically, the present Social Security structure does more harm
than good to both the economy and retiree benefit packages. SIBORAP
allows most employees to "opt out" of Social Security in favor of
making (smaller) mandatory contributions to a fully funded and
guaranteed, private, retirement benefit program.
Employers would be freed of this employee benefit burden, but would
be required to use their savings to: add jobs, reduce prices,
increase shareholder dividends, or improve employee health benefits.
Employees will have more money to spend, and thousands of new jobs
will be created within an existing industrial infrastructure--- not
to mention careers in (private sector) corporate oversight.
As implied above, SIBORAP prohibits the taxation (by any government)
of: (1) any form of retirement income received from any employee
benefit plan, and fixed-income-annuity funded Social Security
benefits, and (2) any form of investment income, foreign or
domestic, received by absolutely any entity that complies with
SIBORAP.
SIBORAP reinforces the rights of investors in particular, and
citizens of the USA in general, to keep what they have earned,
created, and inherited during their lifetimes, and to pass their
estates to their heirs unencumbered by any form of taxation at any
level. All inheritance taxes are illegal, retroactive twenty years.
Section Ten: Transactional Fear and Greed Controls.
Investors have a right to be emotional, irrational, fickle,
stubborn, confused, fearful, inexperienced, hindsightful, and
greedy. Nothing the most thoughtful and caring professional can say
or do will prevent the errors that many of us look back on with a
frown and a headshake.
SIBORAP will provide 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. But couldas,
wouldas, and shouldas cannot be legislated out of the investment
formula--- even with trading halts.
In reality, financial institutions won't be required to emphasize
long-term investment thinking or to encourage cycle-savvy investment
behavior. But the information is available and the experienced
wisdom is out there for the reading. SIBORAP will help the lazy
investor in his pursuit of wealth, but pulling the right decision
lever is every investor/voter's lonely responsibility.
As to the global investment environment that should spawn a SIBORAP---
that other value investor, the guy from Omaha, put it pretty clearly
just the other day in the New York Times: "Be fearful when others
are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful."
Help put a SIBORAP in your future--- vote!
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
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Last modified:
January 01, 2010
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