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This is the worst hire of a fed chairman since the last hire. Will Warsh get a "too late" nickname too, or does he get a new one?
I wouldn't mind a few more days like today! A nice sale on everything would be great.Lookin red today, ALL red!
I would be more concerned about the impact on the stock market if the communist successfully implement a wealth tax.How does the SECs plan to end the requirement for quarterly reporting strike folks?
Advocates for personal investors are alarmed. Their claims of it being easier to hide trouble ring true to me, as does their claims that the wealthy have resources to keep aware of issues that the average investor doesnt.
The libertarian Cato Institute has said that Trump and his SEC appointed leaders rationale for the change doesnt hold water.
How does the SECs plan to end the requirement for quarterly reporting strike folks?
Advocates for personal investors are alarmed. Their claims of it being easier to hide trouble ring true to me, as does their claims that the wealthy have resources to keep aware of issues that the average investor doesnt.
The libertarian Cato Institute has said that Trump and his SEC appointed leaders rationale for the change doesnt hold water.
It would be interesting to see what they say. I tilt toward it being part of the Accountant Full Employment rules.Having been responsible for SEC reporting as a consultant and auditor at PWC, and in charge of domestic reporting and compliance for a publically traded company I certainly have some concerns. Quarterly reporting though always had a heavy lean towards guidance (which drives stock prices). On the audit side most of the work on a monthly and quarterly basis was still with the focus towards year end, but we still had to pause once the books were closed and get the filings ready. I could see where that would be beneficial to allow the teams to continue to focus on the books instead of pausing to work on reporting. I would imagine most companies will still have quarterly metrics, KPIs etc. etc.
The voluntary notion of the reporting frequency is interesting, I'm curious to see which companies and industries prefer to mainain the current quarterly requirement and those that opt out.
I'm anxious to see how analysts adjust. They still need industry data to be able to report, how to they maintain trust and accuracy?
Time to have some beers with my accounting and analyst friends to see what their thoughts are.
I mostly just roll my eyes at this. Like I said, it has come up over the last 25 yrs. In the past, the main argument has been investors should be focused on the long term, so quarterly earnings are unnecessary and lead to stock price volatility. The argument is you can reduce the share price volatility if you take away what causes it. What this argument ceases to understand is that the market NEEDS volatility. Every buyer needs a seller. It is as much an input as it is a measurable result. If you take away earnings reports, investors/traders will focus on something else to determine if they should buy or sell. Warsh is going to learn the same thing with Fed communication and interest rate volatility. Add to that, the current environment requires CEO's to be sales people - sell the narrative. Can't do that without a qtly call.How does the SECs plan to end the requirement for quarterly reporting strike folks?
Advocates for personal investors are alarmed. Their claims of it being easier to hide trouble ring true to me, as does their claims that the wealthy have resources to keep aware of issues that the average investor doesnt.
The libertarian Cato Institute has said that Trump and his SEC appointed leaders rationale for the change doesnt hold water.
