Blade Opines on Money and Anesthesia

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BLADEMDA

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So, here is a thread devoted to the CA-3 and new attending to be. What is your plan for future success?

1. Diversification- If the last ten years has taught us all anything it is that one must be diversified and prepared for tough times.

2. Debt- I posted 3 years ago that debt reduction was superior to the stock market. I was ridiculed and mocked by the know-it-alls.

3. Precious Metals- One should strongly consider a portion of any savings be held in a real currency like Gold or Platinum. Unlike many I believe Gold is heading for above $2,000 an ounce. Things are going to get much worse before they get better (if they get better).

4. Anesthesia- Avoid long partnerships and seek jobs which start at $250K for academia or $300K plus for private practice. Health care isn't going to be the same by the end of this decade. Rationing of care along with reductions in elective surgery are coming to the USA.

5. Handout Nation- That is what obama is fundamentally transforming the USA into; a socialized country where the govt. redistributes wealth and raises taxes across the board. "Cash for Clunkers", Cash for Appliances, Stimulus Checks, etc. are the exact opposite of what this naton needs to prosper. But, Obama is bailing out the Unions next at taxpayer expense ($100 billion plus).
Everybody has their hands out for a free lunch. The days of hardwork are over. (We are the next Greece circa 2020).


2010-Buffalo-Bullion-R.jpg

American Buffalo Gold Bullion
Obverse and Reverse


http://www.321gold.com/editorials/schoon/schoon030310.html

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1980 High Prices Vs 1980 Highs


Adjusted For Inflation






1980 High Prices


Adj For Inflation



Gold


$850.00





$2,275



Silver


$49.00





$132.00



Platinum


$1,070.00





$2,865.00



Palladium


$250.00





$669.00
 
Gold is just getting started in its rise to $2,000 an ounce. The world is a scary place and the U.S. Dollar will not look like a stable currency in just a few years after all the Obama debt ($17 trillion and rising) comes home to roost. How long can a country keep printing unlimited amounts of money it does not have? Even a Country like the USA whose money is the RESERVE Currency will eventually have to pay a price for massive debt and high debt/GDP ratio? When will the ratings agencies finally slash our AAA credit rating?

Hard Currency is a way to PRESERVE REAL WEALTH against Fiat currencies.
I look forward to the next few years proving me correct on this theory. All it will take is re-election of Obama and then millions more will be breaking the doors down to buy gold.

I argue the real asset bubble is the U.S. Dollar.
 
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consumer prices almost tripled in the past three decades, eroding the metal’s value. Bullion hasn’t kept pace with the cost of bread, fuel or medical care. In 1980, gold hit a then-record $873 an ounce. In today’s dollars, that would be $2,287, according to the U.S. Labor Department’s inflation calculator.
Record government debt and interest rates close to zero percent are pushing gold higher for a ninth straight year, and options show investors expect the rally to continue. When prices reached all-time highs, the contract with the most open interest was the December call to buy the metal at $1,200. The contract to purchase at $1,500 an ounce was the third biggest.
“Gold is not at any peak,” said Martin Murenbeeld, the chief economist at Toronto-based DundeeWealth Inc., which manages $58.5 billion in mutual funds and brokerage accounts. “The world’s money supply has increased and gold hasn’t kept pace,” he said. “We’re now in a period where gold is catching up.”

“Gold has been pushing higher because it’s no longer just a hedge against commodity inflation, it’s also a hedge against a change in world-monetary standards
 
My stance on savings/investment is simple:

1. Gold- at under $1500 an ounce I would be a buyer of gold. It deserves a place in a diversified portfolio (10-20%).

2. Bonds/CD- Again, the risk of the market is huge so this should be an important part of a portfolio (20-30%)

3. Commodities- You need a real hedge against possible inflation. Yes, we are deflating now but inflation is real risk going forward.

4. Stocks- It is a trader's market. Over the next few years the market is likely to gyrate a lot and go nowhere. So, those who trade well have a big advantage over "buy and pray" investors.
 
Just to clarify, you are saying Gold is a good investment choice?


If only we were the Country of our Founders. A place where men had to work to earn a living and where the dollar was backed by gold. Sadly, the USA is in decline and Obama is hastening our day of reckoning. If you believe that the USA's economic policies are stupid and dangerous then buy gold. But, if you think Obama and his adviser's are setting us up for years of prosperity and a stable currency then stick with the Obama Dollar.

I argue that the richest investor's are scared to death and buying gold in record amounts. There is a physical shortage of the metal and wealthy Citizens are more concerned with PRESERVING WEALTH than making money.
There is risk in the U.S. Dollar and the multi-millionare's are buying gold.
 
March 1 (Bloomberg) -- George Soros is helping drive up gold prices by doubling his bet in a market even he considers a “bubble” as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Barclays Capital and HSBC Holdings Plc predict more gains before it bursts.
Soros Fund Management LLC, which manages about $25 billion, increased its investment in SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest exchange-traded fund for the metal, by 152 percent in the fourth quarter, a Feb. 16 Securities and Exchange Commission filing shows. While prices have fallen 9.2 percent since reaching a record on Dec. 3, 15 of 22 analysts in a Bloomberg survey say gold will reach a new high, with the median forecast predicting a 17 percent advance to as much as $1,300 an ounce this year.
“When interest rates are low we have conditions for asset bubbles to develop, and they are developing at the moment,” Soros said at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January. “The ultimate asset bubble is gold,” he said.
In a Jan. 28 Bloomberg Television interview, the 79-year- old billionaire recalled that former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan warned of “irrational exuberance” in financial markets three years before the technology bubble burst in 2000. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 89 percent in the period. Buying at the start of a bubble is “rational,” Soros said.
Gold’s fourfold rally since the end of 2000 has also attracted money managers John Paulson, Paul Tudor Jones and David Einhorn. Paulson’s Credit Opportunities Fund soared almost sixfold in 2007 by betting that subprime mortgages would plummet. Einhorn said in October that his Greenlight Capital Inc. bought gold to bet against the dollar.
‘Just an Asset’
Tudor Investment Corp., based in Greenwich, Connecticut, increased its stake in Newmont Mining Corp., the largest U.S. gold producer, almost fourfold in the final quarter of 2009. Gold is “just an asset that, like everything else in life, has its time and place. And now is that time,” Paul Tudor Jones said in an October letter to clients.
Funds of the four-biggest ETF firms hold 1,583 metric tons of the metal, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Only the central banks or governments of the U.S., Germany, Italy and France and the International Monetary Fund hold more.
Investment demand, including in bars and coins, doubled to 1,820 tons last year as investors sought a refuge from the global recession, according to GFMS Ltd. That exceeded jewelry demand for the first time in three decades, the London-based research firm said Jan. 13. Prices reached the record $1,226.56 a decade after the metal fell to a 20-year low of $251.95 amid sales by central banks. Gold was at $1,113.70 today in London.
Dollar Rally
The price fell as the economic recovery sparked a dollar rally that has pushed the U.S. Dollar Index, a gauge against six counterparts, up 4.1 percent this year. Gold ended last week at $1,117.60, up 18 percent in the past 12 months and 21 percent since the start of the third quarter, when Soros accumulated 2.44 million shares of the SPDR Gold Trust.
“Perhaps Soros thinks gold is going to bubble but the bubble is going to last for a while and he wants to profit from it,” said Jeffrey Nichols, managing director of American Precious Metals Advisors and an adviser to central banks and mining companies. “We could have a bubble but gold can reach $2,000 or $3,000 before it’s over.”
Soros’ New York-based firm became the fourth-biggest investor in the SPDR Gold Trust by the end of 2009, 17 years after he made $1 billion breaking the Bank of England’s defense of the pound. The SPDR fund holds 1,107 tons, more than either Switzerland or China.
Paulson, Einhorn
Paulson & Co. is the ETF’s biggest investor, with 31.5 million shares, regulatory filings show. With each representing almost a 10th of an ounce of gold, the hedge fund firm’s stake is the equivalent of about 96 tons, exceeding the holdings of Australia and Kuwait.
New York-based Paulson is also the biggest investor in Johannesburg-based AngloGold Ashanti Ltd., Africa’s top producer. The Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF is Einhorn’s seventh-largest holding, according to a Feb. 16 filing.
Goldman predicts gold will reach $1,235 in three months and $1,380 in 12 months. Barclays Capital says the metal will average $1,235 in the fourth quarter. HSBC says it may peak at $1,300 this year.
“I absolutely believe it’s heading into a bubble, but that’s why you buy it,” said Charles Morris, who manages $2.5 billion at HSBC Global Asset Management’s Absolute Return Fund in London. “A bubble is good,” he said, forecasting the metal may rise to $5,000 in five years to explain why 11 percent of his fund is in gold.
World Economic Growth
The metal dropped from the record high as recovering economies pushed up the dollar. The Washington-based IMF increased its forecast for world economic growth in 2010 to 3.9 percent in January, from 3.1 percent in October.
Gold may drop 28 percent to $800 this year if the U.S. raises interest rates, said New York-based Tom Winmill, who manages $120 million at the Midas Fund. Gold generally only earns interest for banks that lend it, so its lure over cash diminishes as borrowing costs increase.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said Feb. 24 that the U.S. economy is in a “nascent” recovery that still requires low borrowing costs. U.S. policy makers likely will start raising the target rate for overnight loans between banks from the record low range of zero to 0.25 percent in the third quarter, according to the median estimate of 72 economists.
‘Very Expensive’
“Gold looks very expensive right now,” said Brian Nick, an investment strategist at Barclays Wealth in New York, which manages $221 billion. “Yes, rates are low but are they low enough to produce runaway inflation? Actual inflation numbers haven’t pointed to a worrying trend” that would prompt Fed action to cool an overheating economy, he said.
U.S. consumer prices will rise 2.15 percent this year, compared with last year’s 0.35 percent decline, according to the median of 60 estimates.
Stock-option traders are boosting bearish bets against gold-mining companies’ shares, paying the most in more than a year for options to protect them from declines. Bearish options on the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF, which tracks 31 producers, were 12 percent more expensive than bullish ones last week, the highest premium since December 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Hedge funds and speculators are paring bets that gold will keep rising. There were 200,622 more outstanding futures contracts that profit on the metal gaining than wagers that pay when prices fall as of Feb. 23, down from 262,331 in November, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show.
More Bullish
Traders remain more bullish than in past years, with speculative long bets on gold on the New York Mercantile Exchange outnumbering short wagers by more than 7-to-1, compared with less than 5-to-1 in the three years before the September 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. spurred demand for gold’s perceived safety.
Central banks likely will expand their reserves for a second straight year, said CPM Group, a New York commodities researcher. The last time they added to stockpiles, in 1988, gold fell 15 percent and then took 15 years to recoup its losses, suggesting they may not be the best indicator of investment timing. Central banks hold about 18 percent of all gold ever mined.
Through the end of last year, gold was up about 29 percent since its 1980 peak. In that same period, Treasuries rose about 1,090 percent. The S&P 500 earned more than 2,300 percent with dividends reinvested over the three decades. Even cash in the average U.S. checking account outdid gold, gaining 92 percent.
Premature Bubble
The combined holdings of the biggest ETF providers -- State Street Corp., ETF Securities Ltd., Zuercher Kantonalbank and Barclays Capital -- rose more than 16 times from 95 tons five years ago.
It may be premature to declare a bubble by the standards of other commodities. Copper rose 188 percent in the year to May 2006 before falling 38 percent in nine months. Crude oil doubled in about 11 months before peaking in July 2008 and slumped 77 percent in the next five. Gold hasn’t had a 12-month gain of more than 55 percent since October 1980. Adjusted for inflation, it’s still worth about half of its 20th century peak of $850 on Jan. 21, 1980.
Touradji Capital Management LP founder Paul Touradji said in a March 2008 letter to his hedge fund clients that the commodity market was a “buying orgy” of inflated prices. Oil, which had gained 80 percent in the previous 12 months, went up 35 percent more in the next four months. Touradji’s largest equity holding at the end of the fourth quarter was a stake in Toronto-based Barrick Gold Corp., the world’s biggest producer of the metal.
“Gold makes sense as an investment,” said Jeffrey Christian, the managing director of CPM Group. “Just because the price of gold is going up for the 10th year doesn’t mean it’s a bubble.”
--With assistance from Claudia Carpenter in London, Millie Munshi, Jeff Kearns and Katherine Burton in New York and Kim Kyounghwa in Singapore. Editors: Stuart Wallace, Phil Kuntz
To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Larkin in London at [email protected]; Pham-Duy Nguyen in Seattle at [email protected]
 
Gold. Gold. Platinum. The demand is at an all time high. My money manager told me that there many new funds opening up this year to buy gold. The "bubble" is just getting started in gold.

Pullbacks of under $1200 an ounce are met with buyers. At under $1100 an ounce the traders may be sellers but many like myself are buyers. At $1,000 an ounce or less I would buy as much as I could afford. The long term trend of Gold is over $1500 an ounce and most see over $2,000 an ounce.


"Through the end of last year, gold was up about 29 percent since its 1980 peak. In that same period, Treasuries rose about 1,090 percent. The S&P 500 earned more than 2,300 percent with dividends reinvested over the three decades. Even cash in the average U.S. checking account outdid gold, gaining 92 percent."

Gold has a long way to run.
 
THIS IS SOME SERIOUS MONETARY INFLATION


Blanchard%20chart%20jpeg.jpg



TOTAL CURRENCY COLLAPSE? WHO KNOWS FOR SURE. CERTAINLY HEADED THAT WAY.

SIGNIFICANT DOLLAR DEVALUATION AND CRISIS? YOU CAN BET YOUR GOLD ON THAT.
 
Gold is, by any reasonable standard, a lousy investment.

Gold is the financial weed of the 21st century. You can't stamp it out.

Gold doesn't pay interest; it's a depreciating asset.

The world's central banks, which own a quarter of all the gold that has ever been mined, have publicly pledged not to conduct large private sales. Their dumping of gold reserves in the 1990s helped hold the price down.

Gold enjoys a perverse and self-reinforcing advantage over every other product in the known universe. When the price of anything goes up, demand for it goes down -- except for gold. Investment demand for gold actually rises in line with the price.

In fact, over the past 25 years, the opportunity cost of investing in gold has been staggering: $1000 invested in gold would now be worth about $700, whereas the same amount invested in the US stock market would be worth almost $10 000.

Gold is a good diversification since it is inversely correlated with the equity market.
Flushing money down the toilet as shares prices go up is also inversely correlated with the equity market, but who'd do that?

There is a shortage of gold production compared with that used in jewelery fabrication.

This is irrelevant as there is more than a 50 year supply of gold above ground - an oversupply for production purposes.

All this points to a Gold bubble that will bust, so don't get greedy and buy too much.

Stick to real assets like stocks that pay dividends or stocks of growing companies.
 
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Gold is, by any reasonable standard, a lousy investment.


Gold is the financial weed of the 21st century. You can't stamp it out.


Gold doesn't pay interest; it's a depreciating asset.


The world's central banks, which own a quarter of all the gold that has ever been mined, have publicly pledged not to conduct large private sales. Their dumping of gold reserves in the 1990s helped hold the price down.


Gold enjoys a perverse and self-reinforcing advantage over every other product in the known universe. When the price of anything goes up, demand for it goes down -- except for gold. Investment demand for gold actually rises in line with the price.


All this points to a Gold bubble that will bust, so don't get too greed and by too much.


Stick to real assets like stocks that pay dividends or stocks of growing companies.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iax_BsNICes&feature=related
 
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For the first time I am seeing the AANA saturate the market with new schools and graduates. The future for the CRNA is not as bright due to their own organization trying to keep the AA at bay. The AANA "master plan" is most likely going to backfire on them as flooding the market will lead to lower CRNA wages and less job opportunities.

Also, I take the contrarian viewpoint about future anesthesia manpower needs. I see less elective CMS surgeries circa 2019 after Obamacare kicks into gear. Rationing of care incl. expensive elective surgeries is how the govt. will save money. Think England and not USA health care at the end of this decade. That means generic drugs, basic primary care and limited surgical procedures.

Of Course, MD Anesthesiology income wil decrease as well; but due to the oversupply of midlevel providers courtesy of the AANA at least Physicians retain the upper hand in quality. Despite the rhetoric about future CRNA retirement making room for these new graduates I can tell you it isn't happening in my State. The poor economy which is likely to remain poor will delay most CRNA retirements by at least a decade or more.
 

When demand D1 is in effect, the price will be P1. When D2 is occurring, the price will be P2. The quantity is always Q, any shifts in demand will only affect price.



economics3.gif
 
With the possible exception of the sophisticated investor with a very large net worth, I think gold is a lousy investment.

Unlike equity positions, gold doesn't produce new wealth. Timed correctly, one can certainly make money off the fluctuations of gold, but this is akin to gambling in a casino. As such, gold is not a great investment to hold for a long period of time (20 plus years).

Gold is taxed differently than other investments. The IRS treats gold as a collectible and it is subject to a 28% tax rate as opposed to the still low 15% capital gains tax rate.

The fees for acquiring gold and gold-backed funds are relatively high compared to stock and bond mutual funds.

And I'll leave you with this quote:

"[Gold] gets dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace. Then we melt it down, dig another hole, bury it again and pay people to stand around guarding it. It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head."

-Warren Buffett
 
Greed is not a good thing . I have lost faith in the America I grew up in during the baby boom. I followed the work ethic of my parents and immigrant grandparents. When I look around today- though I dont even like to travel far from my homebase -- I see lazy selfish entitled human beings who do not seem to know the America I cherished. My simple little study desk in our tiny home sat below photos of JFK, LBJ, Apollo astronauts and a baseball player. The family had 20 records for the phonograph. We all played a musical instrument and backyard sports at the playground which we walked to. The family ate dinner together and watched some TV together. My working parents payed their bills and provided for education for their kids. Vacations were simple and few. At age 12 I started a part time job in a garden for a neighbor and worked continuously til present. I don't take 8 weeks off. I never planned to make what I do in this field, I just loved science. I pushed the EKG chart as a MS3-4, shoveled snow in the hospital parking lot, sold my blood, night-time H&P's at a neighboring hospital for $8. Once in practice- payed my loans , drove an older car , rented a house, saved for downpayment on house, saved $ in bank , No fancy trips or Rolex..... After 15 yrs I accumulated more wealth than the my parents...house is paid, autos paid, RV paid,boat paid, IRA maxed, Bought gold at $295, Silver starting @ $4.. NO DEBT - NO DEBT - NO DEBT- Get it......How Americans buy things they can't pay for is confusing. No, it's Greed, Selfish Greed . My next purchase is more land adjoining my small farm, I will only buy as many acres as I can pay for in cash , not all 40 acres that I dream of owning. ....I can't fix the Governments mishandling of our taxes and the country's credit score. Stop illegal Immigration, Manufacture everything here, consume less, help your neighbor- unless they are lazy, Vote, grow some food- it tastes great when you do. ...........Excuse my digression from original topic, but it got my head spinning once again.. and YES buy some metals.
 
Gold is, by any reasonable standard, a lousy investment.

Gold is the financial weed of the 21st century. You can't stamp it out.

Gold doesn't pay interest; it's a depreciating asset.

The world's central banks, which own a quarter of all the gold that has ever been mined, have publicly pledged not to conduct large private sales. Their dumping of gold reserves in the 1990s helped hold the price down.

Gold enjoys a perverse and self-reinforcing advantage over every other product in the known universe. When the price of anything goes up, demand for it goes down -- except for gold. Investment demand for gold actually rises in line with the price.

In fact, over the past 25 years, the opportunity cost of investing in gold has been staggering: $1000 invested in gold would now be worth about $700, whereas the same amount invested in the US stock market would be worth almost $10 000.

Gold is a good diversification since it is inversely correlated with the equity market.
Flushing money down the toilet as shares prices go up is also inversely correlated with the equity market, but who'd do that?

There is a shortage of gold production compared with that used in jewelery fabrication.

This is irrelevant as there is more than a 50 year supply of gold above ground - an oversupply for production purposes.

All this points to a Gold bubble that will bust, so don't get greedy and buy too much.

Stick to real assets like stocks that pay dividends or stocks of growing companies.

http://marketforceanalysis.com/index_assets/WHY OWN PHYSICAL GOLD and SILVER .pdf


Please read and respond. The Central Banks don't want you owning Gold. All it takes is for the average "Joe" to decide he wants to own just a few coins and the price of Gold skyrockets.
 
The goal of this portfolio is to provide an investor with a financial hedge against any economic, political, social or currency-based crises with an easy-to-manage and diversified portfolio of gold and gold-related investments. While every type of investment will by nature have some degree of risk, this gold safety portfolio has significantly lower risk than the gold profit or balanced portfolios that we'll talk about in a few minutes. However, it's important to remember that a potential lower reward is usually sacrificed for lower risk. Since this portfolio represents the extreme safety side to investing in gold, it will be very heavy with physical gold and cash, but will still diversify slightly into gold production stocks.

Here's how I would allocate $5,000 for a gold investment portfolio focused on safety:
gold_safety_portfoliopng.png
 
http://www.businessinsider.com/jim-...n-says-european-leaders-fear-lehman-ii-2010-5


Jim Cramer Announces His Place On The Gold Bandwagon, Says European Leaders Fear Lehman II

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Joe Weisenthal | May 18, 2010, 7:42 PM | 3,051 | 19


Jim Cramer is a gold bull!
During his STOP TRADING segment, he told Amanda Drury he likes gold bullion, the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) and miner Eldorado Gold (EGO).





Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/jim-cramer-announces-his-place-on-the-gold-bandwagon-says-european-leaders-fear-lehman-ii-2010-5#ixzz0pW2Zp7Zw
 
http://sufiy.blogspot.com/2009/05/warren-buffett-and-gold-inflation-is.html

By the way, Buffett owns some gold (personal) and likes other precious metals better.



Warren Buffett on Investing in Gold
About the shiny metal Warren once said:
"Gold gets dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace. Then we melt it down, dig another hole, bury it again and pay people to stand around guarding it. It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head."
You can add me to that list of head scratchers, although I do always keep just enough on hand to bribe the border guards if I had to.
Other metals, on the other hand — like copper, nickel, platinum, and silver — just seem to make more sense.
That doesn't make gold as trade wrong, mind you. It's just not quite my cup tea as a long-term investment — even as the price of gold tops $1000.
 
Great story about Mr Krahe. A friend of mine paid for his house in the late 1960's with pre 1964 quarters he accumulated from his store cash registers after they removed the silver. At the end of each day he scoured the change for "junk" silver and squirreled it away for a rainy day. He bought a house for $200k with buckets of silver. I used to pay my dog walkers with 1 oz silver bars per walk for years. Those kids are happy now. Find a local estate jewelry guy and you'll have access to bullion as the families bring it in. Or the NorthWest Territorial Mint has good service and a nice website. I now have a local refiner melting all that stupid sterling tableware into nice little blocks.
 
Gold as money is regaining investor confidence daily, both domestically and overseas, as fiat currencies such as the U.S. Dollar are progressively devalued due to extraordinarily lax fiscal and monetary policies. Significant devaluation of the U.S. Dollar is one of the few avenues available for American Government to attempt to meet its $55 Trillion in future obligations. Global investors are coming to the age-old realization that all currencies will be devalued simultaneously in the years ahead in a futile attempt by governments to maintain some vestige of economic growth, and that gold will reassert its traditional monetary role as the only store of value that has withstood centuries of paper money debasement.
 
The goal of this portfolio is to provide an investor with a financial hedge against any economic, political, social or currency-based crises with an easy-to-manage and diversified portfolio of gold and gold-related investments. While every type of investment will by nature have some degree of risk, this gold safety portfolio has significantly lower risk than the gold profit or balanced portfolios that we'll talk about in a few minutes. However, it's important to remember that a potential lower reward is usually sacrificed for lower risk. Since this portfolio represents the extreme safety side to investing in gold, it will be very heavy with physical gold and cash, but will still diversify slightly into gold production stocks.

Here's how I would allocate $5,000 for a gold investment portfolio focused on safety:
gold_safety_portfoliopng.png

And what percent of your total portfolio would you put towards this strategy?
 
http://www.greenfaucet.com/technical-analysis/stark-contrast-in-gold-vs-s-p-500-returns/95658


Since January 1980, the CPI has multiplied by 2.8x. This equates to a compound annual growth rate of 3.5% over the 29+ years since. Meanwhile, the broad MZM money supply has ballooned by 11.2x since January 1980! This requires a compound annual growth rate of 8.5%. So obviously the US money supply has been growing at a much faster pace than where Washington claims inflation is running. This monetary growth rate, less the economic growth, is much closer to true inflation than the lowballed CPI.
All over the world, broad money supplies nearly always grow by at least 7% annually. So over the 29+ years since early 1980, a conservative 7% average growth rate yields a 7.4x multiplication of the global supply of fiat currencies. Meanwhile the above-ground global gold supply, since this metal is so incredibly challenging to find and mine, tends to only grow by about 1% a year. This is why gold is so valuable. 1% growth over this same span yields a gold supply today about 1.3x as large as January 1980's.
So with 7.4x more paper money available to bid on 1.3x more gold, monetary growth has outpaced gold growth by 5.7x per these rough estimates. If you multiply the January 1980 gold high of $850 by 5.7x, it yields almost $4850 per ounce! The key takeaway is that today's $1000 gold is really no big deal relative to gold's real price history. At the end of gold's last secular bull, this metal soared to multiples of $1000 in terms of today's currencies' actual purchasing power.
 
And what percent of your total portfolio would you put towards this strategy?


I would start with 10% and overweight Gold up to 30% provided we get a pullback this year under $1150 or hopefully $1100. As Gold breaks $1500 an ounce one should think about scaling back exposure a bit. My plan is to sell some Gold when it breaks $2,000 an ounce probably in 36 months or so.

I think Gold hits $3,000 an ounce or more but the market has taught me to take profits so at $2,000 an ounce I will sell part of my position even though the "bubble" could go to $4,000 an ounce.

Blade
 
For those who want something other than Gold why not look at Copper as a way to hedge against inflation (a few years down the road) and currency devaluation. Copper is relatively cheap right now and can be part of your diversified portfolio. The same goes for Iron Ore exposure. Metals other than Gold are part of my strategy as well.


World-famous commodities expert Jim Rogers said there are three questions you need to ask (and answer) to determine if a commodity is worth investing in: How much production is there worldwide? Are there new sources of supply? And are there new potential supplies?
The perfect scenario for a commodity on the rise is that worldwide production is limited or declining, there are no new supply sources that could boost production in the near-term and there is no viable replacement when prices get "too high."
Based on all three requirements, copper is the perfect investment right now. See for yourself
 
copper2.jpg

Yesterday, the copper spot price fell below its 200-day moving average. We don’t like to give the charts much attention, but this is one of those breakdowns of support that gets a lot of people excited. At barely $3 today, it’s also 60 cents off its year-to-date high.
In other words, copper just slipped into a bear market. If his Ph.D. still carries any clout, the world might follow suit.

z00_21.gif
Perhaps even more telling, commodities in general have taken quite a hit.
commoditycorrection.jpg

The CRB index, which covers most of the major commodities, is at a seven-month low. With the exception of a few precious metals, May’s been a terrible month for commodities.
 
The time to buy is when the stock/commodity is out of favor. The next few weeks/months are excellent time to start a big position in the industrial metals like Copper.
 
http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/285809


Watch Jim Rogers. He is a Genius. Look at the other Video links. I like Silver and Platinum as well. The point is that the S&P 500 may NOT be the best way to invest for the next decade. I argue you want things like food and agriculture along with metals in your portfolio. These will help protect against inflation and a devalued currency.
 
Jim Rogers: Gold going higher, paper money being debased
By Andrew Moran.

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Financial guru and author Jim Rogers stated this week that gold bullion's value will rise much higher over the next few years. He also said paper money is being debased and the price of real assets will enhance.

Co-founder of the Quantum Fund and Chairman of Rogers Holding, Jim Rogers, spoke with Reuters last week and stated that he will be a bull on commodities for the next decade, or even longer, mostly due to the current financial system weakening and fiat currency debasing.
One ounce of gold reached the $1,220USD mark but then contracted down to now $1,177USD but Rogers sees gold reaching record higher for the next few years because of the major currencies, Euro, United States dollar, Swiss Francs and British Pounds, weakening.
“I certainly expect gold to go much higher over the next few years. Paper money is going to be debased and the price of real assets will be enhanced,” said Rogers. “I don't see the new commodity supplies coming that will end the bull market.”
In an interview with GoldSeek Radio this week, the author of “Hot Commodities” explained that he is not thrilled with the $1 trillion European bailout, which he says will “ensure that the Euro will disappear some day because now it means anyone can do whatever they like because they're going to be bailed out.”
Rogers said he owns the Euro but is having second thoughts because of the recent policy implemented by the Euro Zone.
 
http://www.vaneck.com/funds/HAP.asp...index.cfm?cat=3192&cGroup=ETF&tkr=HAP&LN=3-02

I plan on buying this ETF in the next 2-6 weeks. Long term performance of this ETF should exceed the market. Now is a great time to start a position. Most of these companies are out of favor on WallStreet and that is the time to buy them.

His top 20 picks are all worthy holdings. The only one I don't like is BP (yes it is cheap but the spill keeps going and going) because the potential downside is still unknown.
 
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Thanks blade for finding a reason to own gold. Great Case. Unfortunatly with coins you get ripped off at the coin dealer. The coin dealer makes 10% to 30% on each transaction. So you loose when you buy and you loose when you sell. Then you have to hide your stash of gold or pay to put it in a bank vault.


Sorry. You are wrong here. The "spread" on gold coins (one ounce) is around 3%. That is the total transaction cost of gold. You need to do your research before spouting off. When gold hits $2,000 an ounce the profit margin will be huge and that 3% transaction cost won't be a big deal.

Here is ONE dealer I buy from online. There are many, many others:

http://www.tulving.com/goldbull.html

Please notice the "spread" between buy and sell. He has them posted right there for you to see.

Also, Gold coins has a "minimal" storage fee and no yearly charges/expenses like mutual funds. Storage is CHEAP especially when you have a Smith and Wesson 500. ( I am joking here)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EoJowwbhu8&feature=related
 
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Gold is, by any reasonable standard, a lousy investment.

I think a lot of people misunderstand what gold is. It is a fairly constant store of value over the long haul. Then it also fluctuates greatly during an unstable currency, such as now, and can run up in real value as well for a fairly long period. Gold does not need to go up in real value to go up versus the dollar. Fiat currency will never stop being devalued, so long term the target price of gold in dollars is literally infinity, even with zero increase in real value.

They like to say an ounce of gold back in 30's bought a very nice suit (20 bucks), and does the same today. Meanwhile, 20 dollars today buys you a couple of trips to the cleaners for that suit. If you don't understand how lightening fast currencies are being devalued today, then you won't understand precious metals. If you don't understand why socialist nation's economies are crap, then you won't understand why bailouts, debt/spending bills, and handouts don't grow economies (and therefore don't have booming stock markets). Basically, gold and other precious metals are places to store your value as dollar bills continue to drop in value towards that of newspaper.
 
I think a lot of people misunderstand what gold is. It is a fairly constant store of value over the long haul. Then it also fluctuates greatly during an unstable currency, such as now, and can run up in real value as well for a fairly long period. Gold does not need to go up in real value to go up versus the dollar. Fiat currency will never stop being devalued, so long term the target price of gold in dollars is literally infinity, even with zero increase in real value.

They like to say an ounce of gold back in 30's bought a very nice suit (20 bucks), and does the same today. Meanwhile, 20 dollars today buys you a couple of trips to the cleaners for that suit. If you don't understand how lightening fast currencies are being devalued today, then you won't understand precious metals. If you don't understand why socialist nation's economies are crap, then you won't understand why bailouts, debt/spending bills, and handouts don't grow economies (and therefore don't have booming stock markets). Basically, gold and other precious metals are places to store your value as dollar bills continue to drop in value towards that of newspaper.

:thumbup::thumbup::thumbup:

Now, what about Silver and Platinum? Silver is a Pain in the Arse to store. Too damn heavy and cheap.
Platinum (an industrial metal) and Gold (the King of Currency going forward).
 
I think a lot of people misunderstand what gold is. It is a fairly constant store of value over the long haul. Then it also fluctuates greatly during an unstable currency, such as now, and can run up in real value as well for a fairly long period. Gold does not need to go up in real value to go up versus the dollar. Fiat currency will never stop being devalued, so long term the target price of gold in dollars is literally infinity, even with zero increase in real value.

They like to say an ounce of gold back in 30's bought a very nice suit (20 bucks), and does the same today. Meanwhile, 20 dollars today buys you a couple of trips to the cleaners for that suit. If you don't understand how lightening fast currencies are being devalued today, then you won't understand precious metals. If you don't understand why socialist nation's economies are crap, then you won't understand why bailouts, debt/spending bills, and handouts don't grow economies (and therefore don't have booming stock markets). Basically, gold and other precious metals are places to store your value as dollar bills continue to drop in value towards that of newspaper.


Yes. You got it.
 
Platinum is a good alternative for investing in precious metals, despite the fact that it is not as popular an investment as gold or silver.
Platinum is used in consumer and industrial products, including jewelry and industrial production. In fact, most platinum is used by the automotive industry in the production of catalytic converters. Therefore, compared to investing in gold, platinum can serve as a bet on the rebound in the auto industry. Platinum is more volatile than gold, so, generally speaking, platinum and silver are better investments than gold during periods of economic strength, while gold is safer play during times of turmoil and uncertainty.
 
Monetary growth rate, less the economic growth, is much closer to true inflation than the lowballed CPI.


Exactly. I'll repost this graph to give people an idea just how fast that monetary supply is exploding today in a feeble attempt to deny serious fiscal and economic problems. You keep these disastrous distructive policies up for an extended period of time and I guarantee you civil unrest and significant crime will follow in our entitled and violent society as the economy is simply crushed.


Blanchard%20chart%20jpeg.jpg



Those saying gold is worthless because it doesn't grow in real value are being a little greedy and a bit ignorant to the economic conditions. This is not your father's economy out there. A socialist welfare state heavily in debt is not the setup for exploding economic growth. There's a good chance you won't get real returns on much of anything, but at least metals will likely hold their value as other stuff possibly losses value.
 
The performance of oil, uranium and other base metals in recent years may be pertinent in this regard:
  • Oil is up from $10 to nearly $100 or almost 10 fold.
  • Zinc from $.35 to a high of $2.00, now $1.50/lb or nearly 5 fold.
  • Copper from $.75 to a high of $4.00, now $3.32/lb or nearly 5 fold.
  • Lead from $.20 to $1.60/lb or nearly 8 fold.
  • Nickel from $3 to $13 (high over $24/lb) or more than 4 fold.
  • Indium, Molybdenum, Selenium, Cobalt are all up 1000% or 10 fold and more.
  • Uranium has risen a phenomenal 1300% or 13 fold prior to a recent correction.
Many commodities are up between 5 and 13 fold. Platinum is only up some 350%. If platinum were to catch up with these other less rare and less precious metals, it would have to increase in value significantly
 
Exactly. I'll repost this graph to give people an idea just how fast that monetary supply is exploding today in a feeble attempt to deny serious fiscal and economic problems. You keep these disastrous distructive policies up for an extended period of time and I guarantee you civil unrest and significant crime will follow in our entitled and violent society as the economy is simply crushed.


Blanchard%20chart%20jpeg.jpg



Those saying gold is worthless because it doesn't grow in real value are being a little greedy and a bit ignorant to the economic conditions. This is not your father's economy out there. A socialist welfare state heavily in debt is not the setup for exploding economic growth. There's a good chance you won't get real returns on much of anything, but at least metals will likely hold their value as other stuff possibly losses value.


Yes. That is why the RICH are buying Gold. They want to preserve their wealth more than grow it. Gold is the BEST way to insure your "money" has value in a few years. Gold is real money while the Dollar is just a fiat currency whose value can be manipulated by the U.S. govt. Due to our debt and rising entitlement programs the U.S. govt. needs to devalue our currency in an orderly fashion. We owe trillions of dollars to foreign govts. Obama knows we must devalue our currency so the actual cost of that debt (in dollars) is less.
 
Thursday, May 27, 2010

POP QUIZ



popquiz1.jpg


MONEY? WHAT MONEY?
Greece just got $2 Trillion from banks - $1 Trillion loan package from the E.U. and the IMF and $1 Trillion line of credit from the Federal Reserve.

Q: Where did that money come from?

a. The "vault" at the International Monetary Fund
b. Grandma's savings account
c. More fraudulent "bookkeeping entries" that they lent at interest. THEY MADE IT UP!! It was fabricated on a computer. They do not have it to lend. There is no vault with a Trillion Dollars in it. THERE IS NO VAULT WITH A TRILLION DOLLARS IN IT that they lend to FAILING NATIONS - and if there were, they WOULD NOT LEND IT TO FAILING NATIONS!!

(umm... the answer is c)


Posted by Money As Wealth at 2:26 AM





The Plumbing of a Global Crisis and HOW TO STOP THE MESS!





U.S. MONEY SUPPLY DRYING UP.
Article








We Use DEBT for Money.
Slow The Lending, The Economy Dries Up.
It's Science.

Bucket+Economy.png



How to fix it?

STOP USING
DEBT FOR MONEY!!!
duh.

When you use debt as your money, there is always less money in the system (loan principal) than there is debt owed (principal + interest). In other words, there is more debt than money to pay it with.
Money to pay interest is NEVER created when a loan is made; the money to pay interest, therefore, comes from another borrowers loan principal. Choke off the lending and the recession or depression comes as sure as daylight.

Why?
Because...

Payments are still being made and the principal is written off the books - "extinguished" according to the Federal Reserve.
THINK ABOUT IT.
Look at the illustration and imagine how it works.
Think.

Scr#w the "experts". They got you into this mess!
THINK FOR YOURSELF.
Can you borrow yourself out of debt?

NO!

Then why are they borrowing for a bailout. Borrowing for a stimulus. Borrowing for a program. Borrowing for a project. Borrowing to pay debt. Borrowing for the Pentagon. Borrowing for this. Borrowing for that.
Borrowing for a _________fill in the blank_________ .
ALL they do is borrow or cause borrowing.
More debt.

Why?
Because they have to keep water in the bucket to maintain their scam.
Dry bucket = angry, starving people.
Then what will you do?
Who will you call?
To whom will you write?
 
Whenever you hear ordinary people discuss economic stimulus, someone is likely to suggest that rather than give money to corporations, each citizen should be given a million dollars. Government Keynesians never take such suggestions seriously. Why not? It makes as much sense as their proposals.

If printing money backed by nothing is the solution, there's a much better way: Let us print our own money.

This plan would save the government a fortune in printing costs. It would be a wonderful economic stimulus, tremendously increasing demand for paper, ink cartridges, printers, computers, and copiers. Meeting the demand would put a lot of people to work.

Sure, there are problems to overcome. For example, who would go to work to make or sell all that stuff when they could stay home and print money? President Obama could assign military personnel to man the unworked sales counters and factories, assuming they haven't gone AWOL in order to print and spend their own million-dollar bills. He might have to re-institute the draft, ensuring a labor force to serve those who are printing the money. He surely wouldn't get enough volunteers.

Such a system would grind to a halt if everyone is printing money and nobody is supplying paper and ink. The government's current system, also, must grind to a halt. Printing money produces nothing of real value. My plan has the advantage of working through the inanity more quickly, so that a real resolution can be attained.

From the president to the welfare recipient, people confuse money with wealth. Money is no more wealth than a tape measure is waistline. Money is merely a measuring stick. Changing the inch markings on the tape measure, making them further apart, does not mean that you have suddenly become slim and buff. Neither does inflating the money supply mean that we have become wealthier.

A person who has stocks of food or bolts of cloth has wealth even before exchanging any of the commodity for money. A person who has money but nobody willing to exchange real goods for it has no wealth. A Zimbabwe dollar won't buy you a piece of bubble gum. At the rate the Fed is printing, the US dollar shall not fare much better.

But at least with a full ink jet and a stock of paper we could live well today, right?
 
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