Speculators trade in two weeks what the world makes in a year

by Systemic Disorder Thursday, Dec. 20, 2012 at 6:53 PM

The gargantuan size of the financial industry gives its largest players the power to dictate to the world’s governments.

Speculation rests on phenomenal amounts of money sloshing around the globe. We could call this endless wave a permanent tsunami, except that would grossly understate the size of the financial wave.

If we could pile up all the money that is exchanged in financial markets and make a literal wave out of it, it would make for an astounding sight were we on the International Space Station, towering above the clouds. The wave would rise so high it might swamp the space station itself.

All right, I am getting fanciful here. And we wouldn’t want to contemplate having to bail out the space station in zero-G conditions. But we are talking about an international financial industry that has truly grown to monstrous proportions, beyond any reasonable necessity.

How big? The combined daily trading average on the world’s foreign-exchange, bond and stock markets is very roughly about US trillion. If that total seems amazing, it is for good reason: By way of comparison, the gross domestic product of the world is about trillion. To put it another way, in 11 business days financial speculators trade instruments and contracts valued at more than all the products and services produced by the entire world in one year.

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Original: Speculators trade in two weeks what the world makes in a year