archman82011

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    • Fri Nov 21st 08:49 AM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The Downfall of Keynesian Economics and the U.S. (Part 3 of 3)
      << When everyone heads for the U.S. government debt exits, the only thing that will have value will be hard assets -- commodities and real estate. Paper assets, including bonds, stocks, and currency, will be worthless.>>

      Agreed.
      Other than PM, the other 9 stocks that make up my portfolio are non US listed stocks or REITS, that to this day, have been reporting great earnings and are not affected by the credit crisis or the global slowdown. 2 of those stocks are somewhat commodity related names that are down right now, however will bounce back big time once the rest of the world is back on it's feet.

      During that time the US will be struggling to even get back on its knees with all its debt and failed consumerism policies of growth.

      Over the coming decade the rest of the world, or atleast those parts of the world that have room to grow multifold, are going to realize that they never needed the small 300 millions american consumers to fund their growth. Their own populations of "billions" are going to do it for them.

      I love our country, and I am an American, but we as a country have dug our own grave and now we have to lay it in.
      View article »
    • Fri Nov 21st 08:11 AM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The Downfall of Keynesian Economics and the U.S. (Part 3 of 3)
      <<While I agree with almost everything you've written - the facts prove otherwise during this latest crisis. The dollar has strengthened to levels not seen in years...and gold has sold off. Treasuries are so strong, they've actually moved to negative yield. None of this supports your very logical argument.>>

      The dollar going up is NOT a flight to "quality".

      The dollar going up IS a flight to "quantity"

      Over the coming 5 years look for the dollar to make new lows. Most other countries have had it with our phony, consumerism economy, and they are now verbally letting us know this. The rest of the world will be in no rush to finance america's debt in the coming years and are starting to realize that they will never be paid back for all the money they lent us in the past.

      Other than a very few select US stocks that make most of their money overseas, the average investor should not own US stocks. They should own foreign stocks that trade directly on the exchanges in which the companies belong, for both capital appreciation, income, and currency appreciation against what will be a falling dollar.

      Don't expect this to happen right away.
      These things take time.
      It is going to happen.
      View article »
    • Tue Nov 18th 15:48 PM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Market Stress Leads to More Smoking, Switch to Cheaper Brands
      <<This article should refer to MO, PM is only active outside the United States. Got Fact Checking? Reply >>

      Nah. Its more fun to lump everyong in one spot. That way its meets their hidden agenda to bash companies they might not like or have some other position in.
      View article »
    • Fri Nov 14th 16:25 PM
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      Rating: 0 -1
      Commented on:
      Is Buy-and-Hold Dead? Hardly
      The fact that an idiot like Macke, and the others from CNBC say buy and hold is dead, is the very reason that it does work as an investment thesis.

      However, it cannot be done as a stand alone investment strategy. One must hedge, also depending on where you invest, there are currency hedges that must be put on.

      Almost any market outside the US (well maybe except for Europe) offers such great opportunity, especially Canada (one of the most fiscally responsible country's out there)


      View article »
    • Fri Nov 14th 12:17 PM
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      Rating: +1 0
      Commented on:
      The Stock Market Is Not the U.S. Economy
      I will post the following again for I am patient and know that "things take time to play out" just like they did in the years leading up to this collapse in the market and economy.

      In the "youtube" video that was posted, you can clearly see how someone like Peter Schiff was early, yet dead right, and people such as Arthur Laffer were dead wrong. What is worse, people like Laffer are still paraded around on CNBC as if they have any credibility at all left. People such as Laffer, Luskin, Kudlow, Farrell, etc, are all bold faced liars who get away with it because we the public, allow them "zero accountability".

      My repeat post:

      Invest your money in companies outside the US. Do not be fooled by all the lies you hear about how "the US is going to lead the world" in the future.

      For now, we are done. Our government is clueless, our business leaders were crooks (ok well not all of them but unfortunately in the areas ie: banking, lending, rating, etc) and the US "prior" to all this mess was already the worlds biggest debtor nation.

      Regardless of other countries and economies reflating right along with us, and using their reserves, many countries (India, China, other emerging countries) actually make stuff, unlike the US where we are expert, now broke, consumers.

      The favorite bull argument that: "China, India, etc, need the US consumer to survive" will be proven wrong over the next 5-10 years, as their own citizens become consumers of their own goods, thus negating any effects of lost US consumption. These things take time, and time is not what the financial media wants you to think about.

      Own stocks in Canada, Singapore, etc, that trade directly on those exchanges. Over the next 50 years, the US dollar will continue to decline, and economies outside the US will grow and grow.
      You will get the double boost of share return plus currency return. Again, these things take time, and the financial media wants to keep you focused on "Mad Money" and "Fast Money". Not real money.

      Please google the video "money as debt" and take 47 mins out of your life to learn how banking really works, how money is really created, and why this debt/credit crisis has a long way to go in the US.

      The rest of the world will come out of it long before the US, for like I said, we were already the worlds biggest debtor nation prior to this crisis, both on a governmental level and a consumer level.
      View article »
    • Fri Nov 14th 11:27 AM
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      Rating: +1 0
      Commented on:
      The Stock Market Is Not the U.S. Economy
      << Do people really think that everyone is a cheerleader still? I struggle to find any optimism these days.>>

      Feel free to tune into this channel: CNBC

      Where optimism never left. Where they tell you how to protect your money and survive the bear market, "after" the market has fallen 30% from the high.

      Where "investing" goes out the window and they substitute "gambling" knowing how weak, desperate, (and broke) americans are. Hence "Fast Money, "Mad Money", million dollar portfolio challenges.

      Where shills come on and call yet another "bottom" after calling 10 bottoms already from DOW 14K 13K 12K 11K 10K 9K 8K...

      Ofcourse the shill fund managers get paid by foolish americans who are happy to pay "asset gatherers" instead of what are supposed to be "asset managers" I think Bill Miller is still hiding on his 85 ft yacht counting his hundred million he stole from his fund holders, who are now back at 1998 levels.
      View article »
    • Fri Nov 14th 10:42 AM
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      Rating: +2 -1
      Commented on:
      The Stock Market Is Not the U.S. Economy
      Invest your money in companies outside the US. Do not be fooled by all the lies you hear about how "the US is going to lead the world" in the future.

      For now, we are done. Our government is clueless, our business leaders were crooks (ok well not all of them but unfortunately in the areas ie: banking, lending, rating, etc) and the US "prior" to all this mess was already the worlds biggest debtor nation.

      Regardless of other countries and economies reflating right along with us, and using their reserves, many countries (India, China, other emerging countries) actually make stuff, unlike the US where we are expert, now broke, consumers.

      The favorite bull argument that: "China, India, etc, need the US consumer to survive" will be proven wrong over the next 5-10 years, as their own citizens become consumers of their own goods, thus negating any effects of lost US consumption. These things take time, and time is not what the financial media wants you to think about.

      Own stocks in Canada, Singapore, etc, that trade directly on those exchanges. Over the next 50 years, the US dollar will continue to decline, and economies outside the US will grow and grow.
      You will get the double boost of share return plus currency return. Again, these things take time, and the financial media wants to keep you focused on "Mad Money" and "Fast Money". Not real money.

      Please google the video "money as debt" and take 47 mins out of your life to learn how banking really works, how money is really created, and why this debt/credit crisis has a long way to go in the US.

      The rest of the world will come out of it long before the US, for like I said, we were already the worlds biggest debtor nation prior to this crisis, both on a governmental level and a consumer level.
      View article »
    • Tue Nov 11th 07:31 AM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Is Jim Cramer Right? Is Apple Really a Market Barometer?
      Apple, while a good company that makes fun products, is not the yardstick we should be using to measure the market. It is more the yardstick that measures some level of nonsense consumer spending.

      The average american: An over indebted soul, who confused home equity extraction and credit card debt with real liquid net worth.
      The USA: a country where we measure our success on how many I-pods we own, how many tattoos, and piercings we get, how much jail time we rack up as a badge of honor, and how many different reality shows we can try out for, instead of doing a hard days work.

      We have evolved into a pathetic "reactive" nation of souls who need to be told what to think and what to believe, instead of a the "proactive" nation of the past, that would never stand for most of the stupidity that we now call "normal" in this country.
      View article »
    • Thu Oct 23rd 15:23 PM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The Rise and Rise of the U.S. Dollar
      The dollar is up for one reason:

      Not a flight to "quality", but a flight to "quantity".




      View article »
    • Mon Sep 29th 21:00 PM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The U.S. Banking System is Effectively Insolvent
      Please take 47 min to watch the following:

      video.google.com/video...

      For anyone who thinks that subprime is the reason we are in this mess, this video will dispel that. By the time you finish watching it, you will completely come to understand who really owns and runs our country and why this crisis was decades in the making.
      View article »
    • Thu Sep 25th 15:02 PM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Bill Gross Will Work For Free, Kind Of
      When the hell is someone, anyone, going to start questioning the role that Bill Gross and Pimco played in this whole debacle.

      Why is it that Gross ran, not walked, up to offer his services for managing the bailout funds?

      Hmmm. How much toxic crap does Pimco own right now and how much are they trying to protect themselves and make money for themselves off of this?

      Anyone?
      View article »
    • Fri Sep 19th 07:23 AM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Peak Insanity: SEC Plans to Temporarily Ban Short-Selling
      It is simply this in the ballgame of life.

      Wall Street, The Elitists of this country, The Banks 1

      Average Americans 0

      All this communism will not be felt until 30 years from now.

      My children and their children, are going to be paying for the inaction now of a scared general public who are to afraid to stand up and take back this country from the select few.

      We can rationalize any way we want right at this moment, but by God there will be a price to pay for all this.
      View article »
    • Thu Sep 18th 17:26 PM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      A Resolution Trust Corp. 'Solution'?
      Thy God Paulson spoke to Wall Street and all the banks:

      I shall save all those who acted irresponsible.
      I shall remove the burden of their greed.
      I shall forgive them for their stupidity.
      I shall make whole what is broken.
      I shall absolve them of their debts.




      All at the expense of average Americans, who will still get to carry around their 950 Billion dollars in credit card debt and all their over priced mortgages on their homes that will never be worth what they paid for them.

      If all this does not cause a revolution in this country then we deserve everything we get in the end.
      View article »
    • Tue Sep 16th 09:25 AM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      The Financial Storm of the Century
      Tom Brown wrote not less than 6 articles in the past month yelling the bottom was in.

      He was dead wrong. He lost people a ton.

      He should be in jail.

      Zero Accountability.
      View article »
    • Fri Sep 12th 22:26 PM
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      Rating: 0 0
      Commented on:
      Foreclosures Actually Dropped (If You Don't Count Five States)


      See what Perry fails to mention is simply this:
      The root cause of all the problems we are facing (the credit crisis as a result of leveraged products tied to these prime, alt A, subprime foreclosures) are "IN" the 5 states that he says we can exclude and then everything looks OK.
      But we cannot exclude them because those 5 states, coupled with all that leverage, are completely and utterly overwhelming the other 47 states that are not doing as bad.
      View article »