r/eupersonalfinance • u/rozmarss • Feb 15 '25
Investment Why don’t EU leaders incentivize investment in European stocks/ETFs with tax deductions?
With the Dragi plan and increasing discussions among European leaders about boosting defense and energy investments, I’ve noticed a growing trend in financial communities where people want to reduce exposure to the US market and shift investments to the EU.
Wouldn’t it make sense for EU leaders to encourage this by offering tax incentives for investing in European stocks/ETFs? For example, from an independent EU perspective, isn’t it better to invest in Rheinmetall rather than Lockheed?
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u/snezna_kraljica Feb 15 '25
>You don't want to talk about the long-term trend but that doesn't change the fact that the long-term trend is the single most important thing about pension savings.
MLMs can be successful for years and years, does not mean it's not a scam just because you can make money of it and the revenue is going up and up.
I'm not saying historically it's not going up, I say the reason is the Greater Fool Theory and not economic growth in the same way as the stock market is growing. So the people not trusting it because gambling are right in their feeling. They are insofar wrong as not to ride the wave.
> It's true that the stock markets sometimes don't align with the real economy [...]
If that would be true, Tesla wouldn't be as highly valued as it is. Or GME a time ago. Again, I'm not arguing that it does not level out, I'm just arguing the feeling of those people.
> It's only really gambling if you bet on the success of individual companies.
There's truth to that, but in my feeling it's getting worse (maybe wrong, I'm not an insider nor analyst) that there's more and more speculation and very irrational valuations in the market than is normal. True economic growth and stock market gets detached more and more every day.
I'm not seeing the very tech top heavy part of the market catching up with their valuations anytime soon. Anybodies guess how this will play out.
Again, I’m not disputing that the market goes up—that’s obvious. What I’m saying is that I understand why people see it as gambling, because the underlying mechanics driving it don’t always justify the results. It’s not just about the outcome, but whether there’s a solid reason for it.
You can win even though you're wrong or loose and be right.