Stockbroker

From Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Lonely people)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Your stockbroker after the recent crash. Is the gun loaded? Or is it a cheap appeal to pity?

A stockbroker is a person who helps you buy or sell shares, which represent ownership in a public corporation. The stockbroker works for a brokerage house. A stockbroker is one of several professions called middlemen. This means they stand in the middle, between you and what you want to achieve. Without this middleman, you'd never get there ... that's just what they want you to believe.

Insurance agents are also middlemen, but your insurance agent is not calling you on the golf course to tell you it's urgent that you dump your current policy and buy a different one today. Car salesmen are middlemen too, but they never suggest you sell a car you don't own and buy two more with the proceeds.

What the stockbroker does for you[edit | edit source]

The essential nature of the stockbroker will become obvious after reviewing the many things he does for you that you could not do for yourself.

Ownership of shares[edit | edit source]

Stocks used to be represented by certificates. They were ornate and beautiful. Paper certificates might be counterfeited, but you could hold them in your hand. These days in the United States, stock is in "book entry form". There is no book, there is no entry, everything is in the computer.

Brilliant! So you just get on the Internet and type which shares you want to sell and which you want to buy, right? No, only your stockbroker can do that. You need him.

Knowledge of companies[edit | edit source]

An individual simply doesn't have enough time to scour the world for suitable companies to invest in. That's another useful thing the stockbroker does. He knows which companies are the hot investments at any time, although the only documents you ever see him reading are issues of Hustler. Oh, and sometimes he sits there gazing at the fine print on the bag the hamburgers came in.

That's okay because the brokerage house has a Research Department. They do the research, and send out memos to the stockbrokers. Get everyone to buy Acme Corporation this week.

Keen sense of market timing[edit | edit source]

Most critically, your stockbroker has his pulse on the stock market and on the national economy. Not only can he tell you what stocks to buy, he knows exactly when you will get the best price. He is right just about half the time. When you follow his advice and buy a stock at what turns out to be the cheapest price all year, he will let you buy him a beer. When you spend much more than you had to – or sit there listening to him talk about a company's fine management instead of putting in your order, as the ticker shows the price going up and up – well, he has excuses. More excuses than a politician who promised to step down after eight years, when it's year number eight. Study his skill if you are a married man. You can learn from him.

Power of persuasion[edit | edit source]

In view of all the above, and the fact that your stockbroker will do no better than you could do for yourself (if you were allowed to), the stockbroker's most important attribute is his ability to manipulate you. That now is the time to buy or that now is the time to sell and that you should do things for no other reason than that now is the time and that in the face of your portfolio's meltdown that you shouldn't get emotional with him (only he can steer you away from the rocks) and that, penultimately, that's enough thats.

Gambling is another thing you cannot do alone but must do in a casino. But imagine if the casino had a "registered representative" following you around, steering you toward specific slot machines, and telling you you'd never win unless you put those coins in right now.

We can see that the stockbroker is an agent you couldn't do without.

Speaking of persuasion, some large brokerage houses call him an "account executive". He's no executive. He's a bleepin' salesman. Yes, he "executes" things, such as legal documents, just as you "execute" left and right turns on your way to meet with him.

Breaking stocks[edit | edit source]

As we all know, breaking stocks is hard. That's why we spend $100 a month on a stockbroker, instead of the unreliable facebook hacker. But I'll tell you a secret to put the greedy stockbrokers to a end (as well as the $100 dollar bill). If you attach a headcrab to his/her head, they will submit to you for free, and you will never have to pay a single cent to them (they may try scratch you, but its fine). Even better, the stockbrokers love it! A couple of things my headcrab brokers said: "Guuuurgghhhh" (translates to "I love my job!") "Heelllllpppppp" (translates to "dude thanks for working with me :D") "Killllll meee" (translates to "lets work together forever!")

Typical workday[edit | edit source]

Girding for battle[edit | edit source]

The stockbroker's day starts early. It takes a lot of preparation to convince investors that a man who was selling used cars a year ago is a financial genius. The stockbroker has a large number of three-piece suits, silk ties, and Brooks Brothers shirts. He must color his hair, be clean shaven, and possibly even use make-up, as though he lived in Montreal. Only lawyers spend more time managing every hair follicle; but then again, freeing mass murderers is a more difficult job.

The stockbroker then turns his attention to the many props he will need at his workplace to seem urbane and plugged-in. For most stockbrokers, a staple is a copy of the Wall Street Journal and a college class ring. (The latter can be bought at any good pawn shop.) He needs a PDA, or comparable electronic gadget to fiddle on purposefully.

The finishing touches are personal idiosyncrasies. The stockbroker may bring a bottle of Maalox to work, filled with milk, and chug from it every time the Dow drops 100 points.

The workday[edit | edit source]

Stockbrokers deal in reality, and the reality is this: The brokerage house gets money, and they get credit for bringing in money, when you buy stock and when you sell stock, and especially when you buy and sell and buy and sell. If you are satisfied with your investments and your dividend checks, then your stockbroker eats dog food.

A fisherman can cast his line and wait, or he can take the bull by the horns, light M-80s and throw them into the water, and grab the dead fish that float to the surface. Likewise, the stockbroker can patiently wait for you to call him with an order; or he can call you to spur you to action. The patient ones are easy to identify – they are no longer stockbrokers.

Your stockbroker has an ongoing problem; he needs to convince you the sure winner he touted all last month is about to miss its forecasts, and you need to sell NOW even though you've made only two percent on your money. Obviously, the facts are not going to make any difference. Facts are facts, and the facts are generally the same as they were last month. What will make a difference is his ability to give you a sense of urgency (make you panic) and tell you what it means about YOUR CHARACTER if you are unable to "pull the trigger".

All successful stockbrokers have a wife. She is a shrew, but he intensely studies her technique. Most also have an ex-wife. That gives him two techniques to study. He is paying alimony and child support. (Actually, you are.)

In the workplace[edit | edit source]

Obama could be a stockbroker after he's done with the current gig ... although there probably won't be stocks by then.

If you think sailors and athletes treat women as objects, you haven't seen stockbrokers during a lull in the trading action. Some of GM's representatives might be unaware of the firm's latest quarterly earnings, but they all can quote every secretary's bust to the nearest inch ("management" is getting her to put out in three or fewer dates) and will patiently review portfolio goals halfway to the parking lot.

His worldview[edit | edit source]

Stockbrokers develop a similar worldview to help them explain how their weeks of training consistently fail to let them outsmart the stock market and live a soft life. This ideology always comes back to the supernatural.

  • They see continual conspiracies from "Wall Street", though they know the insiders are heavily regulated against self-dealing and are no more nor less self-interested than the stockbroker is. A stock goes up, the stockbroker panics and "puts you in it", then it falls through the floor. An obvious trap set by the big-money boys. He rails against greed, which he can't define except as the legal pursuit of self-interest. He wishes the insiders would stop being greedy so he can make a killing.
  • They follow numerology and are always open to new data, such as the sum of the digits of the date, which might explain why their latest sure thing was a money-loser.
  • Some enter "technical analysis", a field in which the twitches on the daily graph provide insight into the inherent worth of a stock.

His addictions[edit | edit source]

Most stockbrokers are drug addicts. Having to hang on every twist and turn of the market gives him extreme mood swings during the workday. His task is to achieve personal mastery over a set of random numbers and feed his personal sense of stardom. For this delusion, cocaine is a natural partner. If coffee and tranquilizers don't help him get rich, he is open to trying harder stuff – not because they are "gateway drugs", but because all stockbrokers are sure the only thing keeping them from Easy Street is "better tools".

The future[edit | edit source]

Although you are required to use a brokerage house – it is the ISP of the stock-exchange Internet – "discount brokers" are now emerging as an alternative to stockbrokers. Indeed, with them you can go to a Web site and buy and sell stocks yourself, between 9:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., so that (in theory) human beings are there to review your transactions and tell you NOT TO GO THROUGH WITH THAT TRADE because it's not in your interest ... Yeah, right.

Discount brokers run the risk of giving the investing public the impression stockbrokers do absolutely nothing for the investor except provide an external whipping boy when he invests in a company that turns out to have tons of PCBs buried beneath the parking lot at corporate headquarters – and even then, though you can yell at the stockbroker, you can't get your money back. Being willing to be yelled at after the inevitable screw-ups, is the stockbroker's real, irreplaceable function. And he does it all with perfect smoothness, even though in the back of his mind, all stockbrokers are thinking the same thing: I need a new scam.

See also[edit | edit source]