R
ribozyme
Guest
What about certain hedge fund managers (e.g. James Simons (he is a quant; he uses computer algorithms to trade and his programs hold positions for minutes,) George Soros (no need to explain him, he speculates on currencies), John Paulson (made billions by buying credit default swaps and short-selling the BBB tranches of subprime securities)). What about hedge fund managers that use convertible arbitrage, merger arbitrage, and fixed-income arbitrage who try to get something for nothing without taking significant risk. Convertible arbitrage and fixed-income arbitrage a lot of money this year largely due to lack of liquidity in the markets they trade in, but they “arbitrage” that is they try to get something for nothing. Now could you tell me how Simons and Paulson created something of value.I interpret “giving it to the poor” a bit different than others. In that I feel it is possible for rich people to use their wealth for the good of the community and help more poor than if they gave it away. Of course there are a few different type of rich people. Those who build buisnesses and earn money through management and coordination of others are different from those who work hard and have proven themselves in a way that they get large salaries. And they are different from those who manipulate or take advantage of others to get something for nothing, I would throw day traders and many politicians into this group. When people think of the rich they think of this group and that is who I think is referenced in this scripture. I don’t think the same applies to the other two groups who contribute to society as much as they get in return.
I’ll also be interested on your thoughts on George Soros and his profits on currency speculation. When he (actually Stanley Druckenmiller) bet against the baht, he was merely a trader in the forex market.