Best Investment Advice for 2011
Best Investment Advice for 2011
BG: What’s your best investment advice for 2011?
Jim Rogers: Buy the rmb [renminbi, the Chinese currency].
Bill Bonner: We are in a period much like the period following WWI, in which the great debts and losses of the war had to be reckoned with. It is an era of great risk. The U.S. faces many of the same challenges faced by Germany and England after WWI. Like England, it has huge debts. It is a waning imperial power. And it has the world’s reserve currency. And like Germany, it is attempting to fix its problems by printing more money. This is not a good time to be long either U.S. stocks or U.S. bonds.
Peter Schiff: Don’t be suckered into the idea that recovery is just around the corner. The current climate is like living in a hurricane or earthquake zone; it’s important to stay vigilant because you never know when disaster will strike. Physical gold is the financial equivalent of a flashlight, first-aid kit, and store of canned goods. It’s a basic way to protect yourself from any eventuality. From there, if you’re looking for returns, there are plenty of foreign markets with strong fundamentals, as well as commodities that feed those markets.
Investing in the U.S. is now driven largely by force of habit. It’s a habit you should resolve to break.
Jeffrey Christian: Do not invest based on what you believe, but on what you know. Gold is a market, like other markets. It rises and falls. You probably want to stay long gold on a long-term basis, but may want to cull the weaker gold assets from your portfolio in the first quarter, and put some hedges in place to protect a long-term core long gold position against the potential of significant price weakness over the next two years or so. Such a period of weakness would be an excellent time to add to one’s gold assets.
John Williams: As an economist, I look for the U.S. dollar ultimately to lose virtually all of its current purchasing power. Accordingly, for those living in a U.S. dollar-denominated world, it would make sense to move to preserve wealth and assets over the long-term. Physical gold is a primary hedge (as is silver). Holding some stronger currencies outside the U.S. dollar, as well as having some assets outside the United States, also may make sense.
Steve Henningsen: Dramamine (for volatile markets), a stash of cash (for potential investment opportunities), and move some of your assets offshore if you haven’t already.
Frank Trotter: My advice is first to look at the other side of your balance sheet – the liability and risk equation – before seeking out absolute gains. What are your goals, what resources do you already have to meet those goals, and what events (health, income stream, upheavals) might impact these risks? Place some assets to hedge these risks directly, then look to diversify globally into markets with higher growth potential than we see here at home, and that may balance your global purchasing power risk. Almost like a religion, we have had the phrase “Stocks are the only legitimate hedge against inflation” beaten into our heads. I say, look at assets that define inflation like commodities and currencies and evaluate where these fit into your risk portfolio.
Krassimir Petrov: Last year I recommended silver, and I would stick to silver again, despite the phenomenal run in 2010. Then it gets tricky. I usually don’t recommend diversification, but now I would again recommend a broad portfolio of commodities. Investing in 2011 should be easy: stay out of real estate, out of bonds, out of fiat currencies, and out of stocks; stay fully invested in commodities, overweight gold and silver.
What to watch in 2011: stay focused on the sovereign debt crisis and bond yields. Spiking yields will trigger the next stage of the crisis.
Bob Hoye: Once past the early part of 2011, the best returns are likely to be obtained from the junior gold exploration sector.
The Rest is Up to You…
Michael Porfirio Mason
AKA The Peoples Champ
AKA GFK, Jr.
AKA The Sly, Slick and the Wicked
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The Guide to Getting More out of Life
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How I See the World Today: Question and Answer Period | Jim Rogers
23/03/2011 at 3:50 pm Permalink
G,
I have been saving in RMB for a while now, even got my mother to start doing the same.
I think the simplest way to take advantage is to open up a RMB savings account at Bank of China in NYC its super fast to open account and it is FDIC back. The minimum balance for RMB Savings accounts is the RMB equivalent of USD500.
http://www.bocusa.com/portal/Info?id=653&lang=1&
I also Save in Brazilian Reais back when it was 1usd to 3 Reais now its 1 usd to 1.67 Reais. One of my best currency moves over the last 5 years.
Matt-
23/03/2011 at 7:33 pm Permalink
Peter Schiff is the best!
24/03/2011 at 4:20 pm Permalink
Aw crap. When people like you start talking investments and quoting Schiff, Gold investments, and Rogers the commodity and gold markets have peaked.
25/03/2011 at 9:57 am Permalink
I’d stay out of paper currencies, like the panelists said. The US dollar is shot, and EU-wise, Portugal is the next country on the bailout line. Italy next?
Apparently some individual states like Utah and Virginia are moving to accept gold and silver as legal tender:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/economy/economics-mainmenu-44/6588-utah-house-approves-gold-silver-as-legal-tender
27/03/2011 at 7:47 am Permalink
Strategy Pony,
When people like you come to spots like these, the conscience is riddled with failure.
28/03/2011 at 12:19 pm Permalink
Strategy Pony,
Using that logic, commodity markets should have peaked 5 years ago, since I have been talking about them that long.
Check the archives.
– MPM
31/03/2011 at 12:15 am Permalink
Invest for survivability. Prepare for 2012 doomsday. Build a fallout bunker. Fill your basement with useful things, specially food and water. =)
31/03/2011 at 10:56 pm Permalink
This is all passive investor advice. With regard to commodities, unless credit frees up to let people build something, energy and perishable stuff will rise, stuff you can hold will stay steady but popular “hedge” items will go up because indecisive people will be drawn to them. The real move is to make something and get people who don’t have any real money to buy it anyway. Like iPad2s (who needs them? have you seen an empty seat in an Apple store lately?).