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Conspiracies & Cover-ups
Money, Banking and the Fed
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<blockquote data-quote="CaryP" data-source="post: 7315" data-attributes="member: 34"><p><strong>Money, Banking and the Fed</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I'm prevented from giving specific investment advice given my regulatory constraints. If I were the average guy on the streets, I'd be looking into "bear" funds. Rydex and ProFunds are the biggest fund complexes that have these kinds of funds. Use them with caution. Surprising rallies within bear markets are common. If you want to see what a "waterfall decline" looks like go to <a href="http://www.stockcharts.com" target="_blank">http://www.stockcharts.com</a> and play around with the major stock indicies to find a place to invest in "bear" funds. We're probably a few weeks away from a confirmation of the return of the bear. If you'd like more commentary than that, please feel free to ask. I'll tell you what I can. If you had invested in a "bear" fund that correlates to the NASDAQ 100 in mid-March 2000 and gotten out at the bottom in October 2002, you would have made about 75% return, while your neighbors were getting their financial heads handed to them. The timing of such a move is near impossible because of human emotions and the "herding impulse" that drive markets up and down. Buy and read Prechter's book "Conquer the Crash" to get an idea of where we are and where we're headed. There are also 200% bear funds available from both of these fund families which double your gains or losses depending on the movement of the correlated index. Be doubly cautious with these funds. The best asset in a deflationary depression that preserves wealth and improves purchasing power without worrying about timing the stock market is cash. Hope this helps, but you will have to do some homework here.</p><p></p><p>Cary</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CaryP, post: 7315, member: 34"] [b]Money, Banking and the Fed[/b] I'm prevented from giving specific investment advice given my regulatory constraints. If I were the average guy on the streets, I'd be looking into "bear" funds. Rydex and ProFunds are the biggest fund complexes that have these kinds of funds. Use them with caution. Surprising rallies within bear markets are common. If you want to see what a "waterfall decline" looks like go to [url=http://www.stockcharts.com]http://www.stockcharts.com[/url] and play around with the major stock indicies to find a place to invest in "bear" funds. We're probably a few weeks away from a confirmation of the return of the bear. If you'd like more commentary than that, please feel free to ask. I'll tell you what I can. If you had invested in a "bear" fund that correlates to the NASDAQ 100 in mid-March 2000 and gotten out at the bottom in October 2002, you would have made about 75% return, while your neighbors were getting their financial heads handed to them. The timing of such a move is near impossible because of human emotions and the "herding impulse" that drive markets up and down. Buy and read Prechter's book "Conquer the Crash" to get an idea of where we are and where we're headed. There are also 200% bear funds available from both of these fund families which double your gains or losses depending on the movement of the correlated index. Be doubly cautious with these funds. The best asset in a deflationary depression that preserves wealth and improves purchasing power without worrying about timing the stock market is cash. Hope this helps, but you will have to do some homework here. Cary [/QUOTE]
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