It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Before Wall Street opened yesterday, American regulators suspended all trading of Dow Jones futures contracts, which had plunged. Such contracts allow traders to bet on the future direction of the Dow Jones index. The plunge had triggered an automatic circuit breaker, which halts trading to prevent a market sliding into freefall.
He said: “This morning, even before the markets in the US opened, the S&P futures fell by more than their daily limit. What I said yesterday has already started.”
A forced closure of stock markets in America would respresent the first time that Washington would have shut Wall Street since the terrorist attacks of September 2001. It would also have echoes of the 1930s, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt shut American banks during an enforced holiday.
Originally posted by swdecord
[
I was under the impression that the stock market, like a casino, involves taking a risk and reaping a benefit...
Would a casino manager come up to you and say "Hey, you have lost a lot of money, so we need you to take a break for awhile in the "luxury, big spender suite" we have given you and stop gambling, as you have reached your "loss" limit." Once you start winning again, then you can gamble...
So, is this fair?
Originally posted by anachryon
The "halt" on trading futures Friday AM is a little misrepresented here.
When futures fall a to a certain level, it is known as reaching "limit down" or "lock limit." In Friday's case, the limits were DJIA at -550, S&P at -60, and NASDAQ at -85. When this happens, "sells" for lower amounts are the only thing halted. The number cannot fall any lower, but it can (and did, briefly) go up when people make buy orders for higher amounts.
Market day trading can be halted. If the markets fall a certain number of points during normal trading hours, all trades can be stopped on a short- or long-term temporary basis. This is known as tripping a circuit breaker. You can see all relevant numbers for the DJIA here.
Circuit breakers were put in place in the late 80s to prevent catastrophic plunges caused by panic selling. They're not there for the 401(k) investors; they're there for all investors. I'm not sure I understand your argument on this point. A 20% loss in a single day on any stock market is a terrible thing no matter who you are. The effects can and do spill over into other areas when a market as a whole plummets. The last, and ONLY, time trading-day circuit breakers tripped was in Oct 97. The 2001 closure was an entirely different situation - it wasn't caused by circuit breakers - and was not unique. The markets also closed after Pres. Reagan's death, when JFK was assassinated, and other major events.
There are no circuit breakers for precipitous increases in American markets, though there are in some foreign markets. The reason for this is because, well, a meteoric rise is a good thing for stock holders. If you held $1000 worth of stock and its value went to $2000 over the course of 6 hours, would you complain?
Originally posted by TH3ON3
I think what you meant is the casino manager would say "hey you have lost millions tonight so I have decided to loan you as much as you need until you make it all back and then some".
Originally posted by gotrox
My understanding on the "circuit breaker" is to prevent self sustaining losses due to overwhelming bets on those drops in a circular fashion creating those losses, giving the markets time to "catch up" on those bets before another round.
But sometimes, I am an optimist.
Originally posted by swdecord
I was under the impression that the stock market, like a casino, involves taking a risk and reaping a benefit...
Would a casino manager come up to you and say "Hey, you have lost a lot of money, so we need you to take a break for awhile in the "luxury, big spender suite" we have given you and stop gambling, as you have reached your "loss" limit." Once you start winning again, then you can gamble...
Seems like regulators are mitigating the losses of the wealthy...
Originally posted by IAF101
Besides, the notion that as the market falls people lose money is incorrect. Big firms that handle 401k's generally take delta neutral positions for a large majority of their portfolios (hedge themselves totally) from any market fluctuations so even if the markets fall or rise they dont loose money.
Originally posted by JJCv2
How is this true, when millions of Americans have had trillions of dollars wiped out from their 401k and retirement accounts with this year's decline?
Most retirement and 401k's give the option of allocation and thats how they work, you get a choice of several funds divided into categories as fixed income, large cap, value, emerging markets etc.
When the market goes down, people lose money, especially hardworking Americans who have 401k's and don't manage them as they should be and or don't really know how to. These finacial companies providing the accounts have their employes give advice as always take the "buy and hold strategy". One of the arguments against such as system is the market exposes to much risk for money required for retirement. Yes not all of the 401k are allocated to equities, but a significant amount usually is.
I think you are confusing pensions (which were the standard in the past) with 401ks of today.