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  • 2 gün önce
The concept of a free market relies on fierce competition, but that mechanism breaks down when the same three investment firms become the top shareholders of every rival company in an industry. This video explores the phenomenon of common ownership, where Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street hold significant stakes in competing giants like Coca-Cola and Pepsi or major airlines. When the same owners profit from both sides, the incentive to lower prices or raise wages disappears. Instead of fighting for market share, these companies are pressured to maximize industry-wide returns for their overlapping owners. This investigative look reveals how the illusion of consumer choice hides a structural system of coordinated extraction that effectively ends competition before it even starts.

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00:00Three massive investment firms now hold the largest shares in every major global competitor.
00:05When the same owners control both rivals, competing for your business lowers their total profit.
00:12These asset managers pressure executives to maximize industry-wide returns rather than undercutting the competition.
00:19The illusion of brand choice hides a boardroom where competition was replaced by coordinated extraction.
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