See the way to play
Monopoly is to buy absolutely everything you land on. Mortgage what you own, whatever it takes. But buy everything. It was designed to show how monopolies work, and was a bit of a stab at capitalism (but I'll argue the state can be a monopoly too).
I think the crux of that article was:
This argument is often countered by stating that HSBC, J.P. Morgan and Citibank are only investing on behalf of small investors. What is of issue here is control and the prerogative of the funds to appoint a director to the board of their choice, not the investors.
It's an interesting predicament. They truly are investing on behalf of many small investors, but somebody
has to be a director.
What's the solution? Is one required? If the goal of a company is to maximise profit then why would having an experienced director on a board be a negative? Or is the author hinting at collusion, corruption, and a lowering of standards for all as a result? The company as psychopath.
As usual there is absolutely no action suggested. It's all just raising awareness. 'Like' this. Lots of question marks and nothing else. The only message I took from the occupy movement, for example, was "Greed is bad. Give us more." The irony was almost everyone of them was in the 1% of
the world and were having the same effect down the line as the people above them they were rallying against.