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by jpthurman 1601 days ago
I’m glad to see a report on this - I hate to see the NFL actively promoting gambling with their biggest stars lining up for the commercials. I’m sure in their eyes it will “promote” the game but it will ruin the lives of many. My grandfather had a gambling problem and was an easy mark in his latter years - something like this would have been a dark pit of cyclical losses and broken relationships
4 comments

This is interesting because legalized gambling is the perfect example of the discrepancy between individual autonomy in theory versus practice.
agree - I suspect that people who have not seen a full, social gambling disease to its real extent, do not appreciate the depth of its impacts on everyone involved.
The biggest problem IMO is that it is impossible for the sports industry to go all-in into betting while also remaining neutral as far as the games themselves go.
I agree but also wish that a similar sentiment was applied to modern investment strategies.
What do you mean by modern? My understanding is that the rise of index funds has been the biggest trend in this space over the past 20-30 years. Riskier bets like individual stock picking, or "experts" that con others with dubious ways of predicting the future, have been around forever.
Well, there are various other modern trends:

* All stock market stuff feels modern, because 15-year-olds don't talk about it but 25-year-olds do. So it feels like something that wasn't really around/popular when you were young.

* Some would say retailer investors who want to buy individual stocks should be holding them for the long term - and that a mobile app, letting you trade on the go, is an anti-feature.

* The rise of Reddit's Wall Street Bets, who glorify moves that seem really dumb.

* The rise of Cryptocurrencies, and/or their marketing to unsophisticated investors. If I put my entire life's savings into Dogecoin, does that mark me as someone so dumb you should save me from myself?

Apps like robinhood encourage and even gamify frequent trading at the expense of naive investors and because that's where brokers make money. Coinbase and their ilk do the same in the crypto market. Frequently trading stocks, and doing anything in crypto is just as much gambling as betting on a sports game, appeals to the same demographic, and is just as destructive.

Yes, stock picking and penny stock scams have been around forever, but it has never been so easy.

Coinbase exposes an api that lets you do some pretty interesting and powerful strategies. Let's see a bank do that. No, seriously, I'd sign up tomorrow for a bank like that.
Mobile apps have made it easier for people to do sensible strategies like dollar cost averaging. Fractional shares, recurring buys, and no fees were not something easily accessible to your average retail investor before mobile apps began introducing these features.