I think its zero sum.
IMO, not only is it not zero sum, with some gouging of your hard-earned due to slippage and brokerage, it's negative sum for many because they borrow, lose, and end up owing more than their original stake.
Dividends paid from earnings make it NOT a zero sum game and NOT a Ponzi scheme.
Of course shares are being created all the time by companies and these shares can suddenly have a huge value.
For example when an IPO is made the company will issue say 20m shares at 50c ea. Total value $10m . However it is certain that the directors and others will have issued themselves another 10-20-30 mill shares at no price. This is their equity. But the moment the first shares hit the market their shares are suddenly worth whatever the last sale price brings. Very creative really.
And if you can persuade lots of people that your little company is going to be a goer you can turn your paper dollars into real dollars. Of course this may or may not have anything to do with actually producing something useful - but you have made yourself money which is the prime objective of the exercise.
.....meanwhile, others just get on with the business of extracting money from it.
The markets do generate wealth - through company profits.
And for forex/futures/commodities, it's not a zero sum game either.
do you think the property market is also a ponzi scheme??The failure of many to understand that the stockmarket is an ongoing ponzi scheme, staggers me.
Price or value of an individual company is set at the margin (ie by a small number of sales). The money coming out of the market can only equal what goes in, less brokerage. For every seller of shares, there must be a buyer who puts up the money.
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