Back-To-Back Letters Of Credit

  

Drastic times call for drastic measures. You saw an ad selling two DeLoreans on Craigslist that you know your friend's high-end car rental company, Viva los DeLoreans, located in Chile, would buy in an instant. What should you do?

Be the middleman. Broker the deal.

You arrange a loan here in the U.S. to buy these two DeLoreans with the seller getting the dough. Your friend in Chile goes to his bank and gets a loan to buy the two cars from you. That process is obtaining back-to-back letters of credit with the intent of easing the level of risk for any one party. And if done right, you, the middleman, get a bit of dinero in the deal to make it worthwhile.

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Finance: What does a stock broker do?19 Views

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finance a la shmoop. what does a stockbroker do? I've been working on the

00:08

railroad. yep that's what they do. they broker stocks to customers and while

00:14

generally speaking. they take a commission for the privilege of selling

00:17

shares of whatever dot-com to their customers or clients. think about stock

00:21

brokers like you'd think about home Realtors only stockbrokers are selling [lady celebrates in front of a house's sold sign]

00:25

47 homes a day for five grand each give or take a lot. in the 1970s Commission's

00:30

paid on stock and bond trades were massive. back then there were essentially

00:35

no connected consumer computers so processing an order was relatively

00:39

expensive and there wasn't a whole lot of competition and it took a lot of

00:43

infrastructure to make a trade. and there were relatively few players in the

00:47

entire industry back then like only three or four big competitors who all

00:50

decided to charge about the same very high commission rates .well the small

00:54

number of competitors made for a much less efficient market which meant that

00:59

the consumer paid a whole lot more per transaction and more meant Commission's

01:03

of 3 4 even 5% like buying a hundred shares of a $20 a share stock for 2

01:09

grand carried a commission of something like a hundred bucks. a broker making 50 [equation]

01:14

of these trades a day did extremely well but oh how times have changed. today a

01:19

typical trade might carry a commission of 0.1 percent that same 2 grand trade

01:25

today well would pay a commission of something closer to 2 bucks.

01:28

yep you heard that right 98 percent less. so the bottom line is that there are way

01:33

fewer stockbrokers in existence today and the ones who have survived have to

01:37

sell a whole lot more shares or do more volume business for their customers or

01:42

if they end up looking like this guy. so what's the daily routine ? well most

01:46

brokers specialize in a given area of client institutional brokers

01:50

pretentiously called sales traders. well they sell stocks to large mutual funds

01:54

hedge funds and other major volume players the order blocks a million units

01:59

at a time and they can trade billions and billions of dollars of stocks

02:02

through one hot broker. well the demands on that brokers day are

02:05

severe and high pressured. the institutional sales trader is expected [woman frowns behind a desk]

02:09

to be up and in the office by 5:00 a.m. New York time.

02:12

the reports from Europe and Asia leaving myriad voicemails for her customers so

02:17

that nervous Nelly by side investors will be encouraged to place their trades

02:22

early and often with that broker. at the other end of the spectrum are brokers

02:25

for retail customers who sell just a few hundred or thousand shares at a time to

02:30

a small group of people who lovingly rely on the broker for actual advice and

02:35

are dramatically less sensitive to Commission prices should they be a few

02:39

cents a share higher or lower. that broker is a trusted party who's relied

02:43

upon to give advice so that Ethel and Ernie Brillstein can retire in the [man frowns, as lady is excited]

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lakeside home of their dreams. so what's the money like well on the institutional

02:52

side it's extremely volatile. in a good year a good sales trader managing a desk

02:57

of a dozen other sales traders can and does make millions and millions of

03:01

dollars a year. and this is great because the average tenure of that sales broker

03:05

is short .they die either in a bear market or in the form of a coronary

03:10

deliver that courtesy of the tightly pressure-packed difficult nature of you

03:14

know kind of fighting that war. well life of a retail broker is kinder

03:18

gentler and poorer. a good retail broker lasts much longer time usually and ends

03:23

up being on the get rich slow plan. such that year after year they're able to

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invest some meaningful amount of money in the stock market on their own

03:30

watching their wealth grow at turtle pace but with thick hard shells of [investment returns sheet listed]

03:34

covering their behind. the qualifications being a stock broker well ?just be good

03:38

with people more than anything else. the deep financial knowledge that used to be

03:42

necessary for the job has all but evaporated and the job of the sales

03:46

trader retail broker is that of regurgitating dialogue written by sell

03:50

side analysts and then synthesize by dozens of lawyers before being allowed

03:54

out of the bullpen. progress or ladder climbing happens by winning new clients

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obtaining new business and increasing the dollar volumes traded through the

04:03

front desk. so yeah stock brokers broker stocks .okay that's the to long didn't

04:09

listen version. [man frowns]

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