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From: | "Phil Eriksen" <phil@acepay.co.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 27 Jul 2001 18:06:10 +1200 |
Hi Ben & Others, I'm not all that interested in a discussion of morality either. You do raise an interesting question however about whether investing in the sharemarket is gambling. Investment in the sharemarket is not gambling. Over the long term, an "average" return in the sharemarket WILL increase your wealth. While the returns in individual companies are wildly different, while the margins on the products those businesses produce will be wildly different, overall, investment in assets that produce something above the "risk free" return available will increase the wealth of those who provide the investment. Overall. Some people will lose a lot of money on the sharemarket ; overall, however, sharemarkets go up, investing in something that produces an income, then reinvesting that income, will increase your wealth. Same applies to a private business. Starting or buying into an existing business is always "a punt", but it is not gambling ; capitalism would not exist as we know it if it was. Gambling is different. In all forms of gambling, the house sets the odds. History has shown that the average return through sharemarket investment is a profit. It has also shown that the average return through gambling is a loss. If you enter into a transaction (ie go to a casino, pick a horse) where the average return is a loss *you are trying to beat the odds*. When an investor aims to beat the long term returns that one could expect from sharemarket investment, that is where an element of "gambling" begins to show itself. Just like gambling, they are trying to beat the odds ; sometimes they win, sometimes they lose, but the odds do not change. The bottom line is that if you gamble, you should do so with an expectation of loss. If you invest, in an "average" way (ie you are not especially bad or especially good) then you should do so with an expectation of profit. This is what seperates the two. Definition Of Gambling : The odds are against you, but you participate anyway and try to beat them. Definition Of Investing : The odds are with you, so you participate because it is rational to do so. Where it gets fuzzy : You know the odds, but aim for far more that they say you are due. Cheers, Phil "Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo" - H.G Wells >If investing in the sharemarket = gambling, and gambling = immorality, then >investing in the sharemarket = immorality. > >Of course, if you do not believe gambling is immoral then this whole >conversation will be irrelevant to you. > >So lets not focus on whether gambling *is* immoral or not, lets instead >focus on the question: is investing in the sharemarket gambling? > >Throwing the cat amongst the pigeons? Maybe we should call in a >philosopher...;-) > >Best Regards > >Ben Dutton ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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