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| From: | Rhys Lewis <rhys.lewis@zivo.co.nz> | 
| Date: | Tue, 5 Sep 2000 11:10:47 +1200 | 
| Why 
did I go through the lights this morning?  Because they were green or 
because I wanted to go to work? If you 
analyse the value of your shares according to accounting principles then they 
have a value every moment that the market is open and there buy orders 
active.  This is the immediate (existentialist perhaps?) value of the 
shares. However value is a concept which transcends the immediate 'price' of the 
share.  Whenever you buy a share you are effectively saying that the value 
of the share is not the current price.  This value exists as a 'belief' in 
the mind of the person holding the share.  The only time the two intersect 
is when a share is bought or sold. The 
reason this discussion isn't getting anywhere is because you are arguing at 
different levels.  The immediate value argument is the 'scientific' 
level.  I went through the light because it was green.  The 
value-when-sold argument is at the 'faith' level, and is at the belief/meaning 
(religious?) level.  I went through the light to get to work - the 
immediate events are the elements of a higher-order truth. In 
strict accounting terms the value goes up and down like a yo-yo.  But for 
the trader willing to act in faith, there is one 'true' value which is yet to be 
realised, and which can only be glimpsed through your framework of belief.  
 For 
those unwilling to believe that there is a future value to which the price is 
leading - you have made a loss.  But to those who have the faith to believe 
- the value is as yet undetermined. Sacramental economics. Either 
way you loose until you find someone who believes the value is higher than you 
do. Rhys 
Lewis 
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