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Freedom by Friday Archives

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12-1-08
The 'Experts'
Some time back I imagine, a
certain 'financial expert' said
these words to you: "Invest for the
long term in a diversified portfolio
with the most beneficial tax
breaks."
Sound familiar?
Hmmm. How good do you think that
advice was after you take an honest
look at your portfolio today? If you
don't mind, I'd like to explain how
that common advice is virtual
suicide in today's world and how, if
you start to think differently, the
most incredible opportunities will
show themselves in the coming years,
if not months...
You already know change is
inevitable in life and markets. What
many people need to come to terms
with now is the increasing speed of
change we are witnessing today. Good
information has never been more
vital.
What does this mean?
It simply means that the
informed few who take action can
make a fortune and sadly, it means
that those who don't will become
even poorer. For example, money
hasn't actually been lost in this
stock market; it's been transferred
from the people who made bad choices
to the people who made good ones.
Think about it: the people who sold
stocks at the peak sold them to
people who then went and lost money
on them (usually the people who
followed the advice of 'experts').
So much for investing for the
long term. What about
diversification? This means not
putting all your eggs in one basket.
The same propaganda is used in
corporations when they talk about
working as a team. The reality of
teamwork is most often that the
brightest person on that team is
'diluted' by the less bright in that
team; a far better result would be
achieved by identifying who the best
person on that team was and only
employing them.
Same goes for investments. What
about putting all your eggs in one
basket but keeping a close eye on
the basket?
For example, I'm currently
looking at a silver mining company.
The stock is selling for below it's
break-up value, it has little debt
and only priced at 8 times earnings.
It's current price is six times less
than it's peak and I'm bullish on
commodities (see later on),
particularly precious metals right
now. Silver is used in a wide
variety of manufacturing processes,
hence the recent falls due to
expected decline in demand.
What I will likely do is take a
flight and personally investigate
this further because I intend to
invest a substantial amount possibly
in that stock. If the investment
performs as I hope, you could be
talking about gains of 1,000%
easily. If it doesn't perform I'll
get out strictly at a 20% loss no
discussions. If I have 10-20 such
ventures on the go, very few of them
will actually need to be winners to
negate the losers, right? Caveat: IF
I use a STRICT bail-out principle at
20% loss.
Nothing ventured, nothing
gained, right?
Next: tax. This one has cost
more people more money than you can
imagine. For example, a few years
back I bought an office condo unit.
I doubled the rent per square foot
simply by breaking the floor space
into executive suites, but that's
another story. Anyway, I sold this
at the peak of the market for a 30%
profit with only 50% occupancy due
to the real estate crash. The price
was way too high and I was lucky to
get out when I did. The reason I was
able to sell it for this? The guy
was so desperate to shelter his
capital gains on another property he
rushed in to buy something else (you
can shelter capital gains if you
invest the profits immediately in
another property). This little tax
break cost that person a lot more
than the tax he would have had to
pay on the capital gain.
Bottom line: don't invest for
tax breaks. Invest in a good
investment then look for ways to
legally shelter the gains.
What are the experts saying
today? Of course, they're saying
that the year after a crash
throughout history has seen a
massive bounce back. And they'd be
right to say this on an historical
basis (even though their small print
says historical performance is no
guide!).
For reasons explained last week,
we will no doubt see a powerful
rally in the coming months. The same
thing happened in 1930 after the
great crash before plummeting 75%.
Like I said, the historical
precedents people are using seem to
be dangerously recent for comparison
in my view.
The thing is, what we're
experiencing now arguably, doesn't
have an historical precedent within
the last 50 years anyway. The
trouble with past data is that it
depends on what part of history you
look at. 'Experts' are keen on
showing you gains over the period
from 1982 until present. Why?
Because that has been the longer
term bull market. Now, had they
shown you figures from 1966 to 1982,
it would have been a different
story: investing for the long term
as they would say, got people
nowhere. That was the longer term
bear market.
So it pays to know about these
cycles...

It's Always Daytime Somewhere
Now of course, cycles aren't
guaranteed, but they have been a
pretty good guide so far. There's
the 20-10 year cycle of stocks and
commodities respectively that I'll
explain in a second, but first
there's a fascinating cycle on a
bigger stage I thought you'd like to
know about...
Every 500 years a seismic change
occurs in history. Around 0 A.D. the
Roman Empire was formed. 500 A.D.
Rome falls and we enter The Dark
Ages. 1000 A.D. Dark Ages gives way
to Medieval times. 1500 A.D.
Medieval times breaks into The
Renaissance. 2000 A.D. we have the
information revolution... and we're
still in it. That's why we need to
stay on our toes. It will make and
break people.
Back to stocks and commodities.
Generally the rule is 20 years favor
stocks then 10 years after favors
commodities. And sure enough, stocks
had their run from 1982 to 2002.
Sure, since 2002, stocks climbed but
this was brought on by an artificial
boost from the Bush government to
stave off recession in 2002 (and has
only served to prolong and extend
the inevitable agony as we can now
see). But government interference
aside, since 2002 commodities have
climbed; I advised friends to buy
gold back in 2002 for $250 an ounce
(it's now over $800). And of course,
oil we know about.
But recently, commodities have
fallen drastically again. As
explained, thanks to Bush pulling
out the stops to get a second term,
the 20-10 cycle was interfered with
by delaying a recession. But only
temporarily. We still have
approximately 4 more years to go in
the commodity cycle if the 20-10
rule stands.
Many insiders believe that what
this mid-cycle commodity crash has
done is create a buying opportunity
for those who were late to get on
board in 2002. It may have even made
the opportunity bigger.
Let's take wheat for example.
Now, you can invest in wheat through
wheat futures markets (speak to a
broker). Wheat is a commodity that
got whacked with everything else
recently but before it was doing
very nicely thank you. Only NOW, the
wheat story is even more interesting
because due to the credit crunch,
farmers are struggling to get loans
for more equipment etc. thus
limiting the future crop yields.
This of course, sends the price of
wheat up if that happens.
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Another thing: when one asset
bubble pops, another usually forms
and this is usually
government-induced. When the
tech-stock bubble burst, the real
estate bubble took over due to the
Fed lowering interest rates
drastically. Now that bubble has
burst, interest rates can't go any
lower so the government is printing
and spending money like crazy to get
out of this. Which bubble will be
formed here? What is the beneficiary
of large amounts of paper money
creation (inflation) and huge
infrastructure projects (drained
resources)? Simple logic would say
(not I): commodities. So I rest my
case about the 20-10 cycle, but
we'll see.
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Broaden your horizons. When it's
night-time in one part of the world,
the sun is shining somewhere else.
Oh, and next time an 'expert' tells
you what to do, ask how much they
personally invest in what they're
selling. Plus, it can be argued that
in the current world anyway, hanging
on tightly to supposedly safe
investments can be fatal. At least
keep your finger on the pulse of
every dollar.
But of course, all investment
requires cash in the first place.
Where will that come from...?

Is it Crazy to Start a Business in
Recession?
Good question and the obvious
answer is a resounding "YES!" But
Bill Gates and many others wouldn't
agree. He started during a
recession.
What a recession does is
cleanses the system. While sad, it
means that the less efficient
businesses will fail and the economy
on the other side is a leaner,
meaner one. Recessions are healthy
and they ultimately mean less
competition.
As we are already starting to
see, recessions puts many companies
at drastically discounted prices and
you may even be able to buy an
existing business for pennies on the
dollar and that's something I've
done before.
But my advice would be to start
a business yourself as cheaply as
possible, preferably from home as a
sideline. Investing the 'capital' of
your time is way cheaper than the
investment of your cash. With a home
business, the down side is a waste
of only your time, but the upside is
massive. Sigh, if only all
investments were like that!
Which business? Ah, for that I
would hand you over to the multiple
array of opportunities hand-picked
by The League of Power, but here's
one thing I've learned: we're
conditioned into thinking, "If it
sounds too good to be true, it
probably is!"
From my extensive experience, I
would argue the opposite more often
than not. That saying is something
slopped out by people who are dirt
poor- why would you take financial
advice from someone who is dirt
poor??
Whenever I've found myself
entering into something that made my
heart beat because it wasn't what
the masses were doing or because it
defied the conventional wisdom of
the hour, that usually meant I was
on the path to riches.
Right now, what is it people
would say that you'd be crazy to buy
into...?
Until next time,
Mark Patricks
Publisher

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