| I'll explain the argument and the counterargument. The argument is that all companies go out-of-business at some point, eventually. With no way to extract money (e.g. dividends), their long-term value is 0. In the meantime, buying and selling is a zero-sum-game. This argument is incorrect for two reasons: 1) Dividends are one way to extract value. Another is mergers, acquisitions, and spin-offs. For example, if Musk had bought Twitter with no dividends, shareholders would make money. If Google were split into 50 mini-companies, and Microsoft acquired one of those, shareholders would make money. There are many other ways to extract value 2) Like dollars, shares act as a fiat currency of sorts. We can all keep our saving there if we all keep believing. If a company isn't in the profit-making business, that's a place for shareholder activism, though. That can be a pool of small investors, or they can be bought by a Berkshire-Hathaway, who can reorganize them for profitability, and resell them. |
This doesn't fix the issue. Unless one of those spin-offs eventually makes a profit and pays a dividend, you're still engaging in a zero-sum game. You just offloaded the bag to someone else, either the owners of the merged company, or the acquirer.
> 2) Like dollars, shares act as a fiat currency of sorts. We can all keep our saving there if we all keep believing.
That doesn't stop it from being a zero-sum game, though. We already have fiat currency that is superior in every way, so what actual benefit to the shareholder over holding fiat?
> That can be a pool of small investors, or they can be bought by a Berkshire-Hathaway, who can reorganize them for profitability, and resell them.
Right, so you mean, eventually the company can be made to pay dividends, which is kind of besides the point?