From: joe@sfbooks.com
Like Ru Igarashi and Penny Gaines, I'm posting this as a news.groups
reader unlikely to vote on the proposal (unless I decide it's worth
bothering to ABSTAIN) and unlikely to use the proposed group if it
passes. I'm not familiar with the misc.invest.* groups except from
the list of them, which I thank the proponent for posting in this
thread; I am, however, moderately familiar with investment vehicles
from years as an accounting clerk, and in particular, as a trust clerk.
Perhaps Ru Igarashi, at least, will find the rest of this post more
comprehensible if I open by saying that "stocks and bonds" is at
least as ordinary a phrase in the Anglophone investment world as
"day and night" in everyday life, and that I therefore find a
number of the arguments he's making entirely implausible. Enough
of this post is addressed to the proponent that I hope she reads it,
but much of it is addressed to what I see as an excessive grilling
of her by Ru Igarashi (one that has continued for at least one
iteration beyond the post to which I'm following up, and yes, I've
read those next three posts).
In article , wrote:
> Irene Waters wrote:
> > wrote
> >> In news.groups Irene wrote:
> >The problem, based strictly on anecdotal observation and, inevitably,
> >some subjectivity: Most regular participants in each of the above
> >groups are specialized in the particular investment vehicle. When
> >someone wants to ask a question about bonds, he or she typically goes
> >to one of these groups and gets an answer that may reflect (1) bias; or
> >(2) lack of study on bonds. If the expertise can be directed to a
> >single group so that it's not so dilute by biased posters and posters
> >with minimal expertise, then consumers with questions will be more
> >likely to get a collection of "expert" responses from which an optimal
> >answer may be derived.
>
> It wouldn't hurt to include the above in your next draft of the RFD.
I strongly concur.
The list of misc.invest.* groups provided appeared to me to include
a couple of predictably low-traffic all-purpose groups (.marketplace
and .misc), a low-traffic regional group (.canada), and a bunch of
vehicle-specific or topic-specific groups. This list strikes me as
an absolute no-brainer for the extension you propose, and the
results you describe above are a strong argument for that extension.
(Um, to translate. If I see "stocks", "mutual funds", and so forth
in a list that doesn't include "bonds", I'm pretty certain to wonder
why it doesn't. I should think people likely to post to the
misc.invest.* hierarchy would have the same reaction. So really,
the only reason this group should *not* exist is if not enough people
can be found who want it to. Period. If the description of
misc.invest.* above, suggesting that there are a significant number
of well-informed posters in those groups, is true, then this probably
*IS* an example of "Build it and they will come." That said, the
argument that the number of posts you're finding is not indicative,
precisely because without the group, the discussions aren't happening
as they should, is a key point. Centralising discussion is a perfectly
legitimate reason to create a group, as I should know, having helped
create soc.history.ancient for partly similar reasons.)
Bottom line: The Rationale is where you convince the person reading
the CFV that they should really take the extra time to finish reading
and vote YES on your group. You should put your strongest arguments
into it. "Right now, people already post bond questions to Usenet,
but they get bad answers; with my proposed group, they will get more
answers, and the answers will be good, and world hunger will be cured"
is the kind of thing you want to be saying in a Rationale. Make your
reader think "My God, when I next have a bond question, where will
I turn if I don't vote for this group?"
> >> How much of the
> >> discussion involves bonds?
>
> >Do you mean what fraction of the total posts at each group involves
> >bonds?
> >I'm not sure how this is meaningful. If it's a large fraction for, say,
> >misc.invest.stocks, what is the signficance of this? If it's a small
> >fraction, same question.
> The relevance comes from the degree of usage. If a particular
> subtopic starts to overwhelm the other subtopics, particularly,
> becoming a burden, then that can be an indication for a need
> for change (i.e. a new subgroup).
This is, however, inappropriate for this kind of situation.
There does exist an underused .misc group, but .misc groups are
normally underused, and I'm totally unimpressed by arguments that
people shouldn't try to get groups without trying .misc groups first.
It is not rational to expect bond discussion to go on in groups
dedicated to stocks, mutual funds, etc. These are *different topics*.
True, some people are familiar with all of them, but just the same,
what I think you should be looking at instead is the traffic numbers
for these similar groups. Those numbers suggest that there could,
and perhaps, with appropriate publicity, *would*, be similar traffic
in the bonds group.
I haven't heard that day-trading and similar activities that would
result in a large bunch of amateurs looking for online help occur
in the bond market. However, the bond market *is* noted for its
appeal to people looking for stability. As a result, small investors
looking for somewhere to put a few thousand dollars do routinely
invest in bonds, and may well want a place to get information other
than their brokers, who are motivated at least partly by their own
fees. (My mother is such an investor; so are various of the trusts
I worked on, though in their case, the trust departments I worked in
would be the investors, and probably would not rely on Usenet for
advice... On the other hand, I know I occasionally had reason while
working in those departments to consult prospectuses, and a Usenet
group to ask questions in could have been useful to me.)
I don't recall the RFD having been cross-posted to soc.seniors. May
I suggest to the proponent that she look in there, and decide whether
a pointer would be appropriate based on what she finds? The
stereotypical bond investor is a senior citizen, is why I make this
suggestion. (Ah. I see soc.retirement and alt.military.retired
in the pointer list, but not soc.seniors. If that means you already
considered the idea and rejected it, OK, but if not, please consider
it. I also see that misc.invest.stocks, much the busiest group in
the topic area, is in the pointer list. Why didn't it get a full
copy of the RFD, but the least busy groups *did*? This makes no
sense to me. If you do a second RFD, I suggest multi-posting so
you can hit all five of the specific-vehicle groups, or at least
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