INVESTMENTS DURING TRADE WARS OR WAR TIMES

Barton Biggs, the well-known former Morgan Stanley strategist, asks an interesting question at the beginning of his new book, Wealth, War & Wisdom: “How do you preserve wealth in times when the Four Horsemen are on the loose?” (By Four Horsemen, Biggs refers to “pestilence, war, famine and death.” See also Revelation 6:8.) Indeed answering this question was his motivation for writing the book. As an amateur historian, WWII buff and investor, he wondered: What’s the point of making money if you cannot preserve it? His book shows how, uncannily, “The equity markets in the principal contenders [in WWII] — the United States, Britain, Germany and Japan — identified the monumental, epic turning points in the war with uncanny perception,” even as individual experts or lay observers did not. Biggs notes that the U.S. market “turned forever” around the Battle of Midway in late May of 1943; that the British stock market bottomed — get this — just before the Battle of Britain in 1940; the German market reached its high-water mark as Hitler’s army attacked Russia (which marked the German war machine’s first big key losses) in December 1941; and Japan’s market peaked in 1942 — despite the tightly controlled pro-war propaganda published by the Empire’s media.

But what are the takeaway lessons? For protecting wealth, stocks are a better bet than bonds (real property only gets confiscated). While gold and jewelry can raise a little “mad money,” as Biggs says, they are still “problematic.” Over the long run, equities are the place to be — even in countries that are losing a war, because historically, even they have managed to beat inflation. Biggs’ advice: Index, and ignore just about everything else. Here is an excerpt from Wealth, War & Wisdom.

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Gold Is God’s Money, Says Author Kiyosaki

Digital currency is only good as long as you have internet. Go to a small village in Africa or colony on Mars Digital currency is nothing but garbage without any or the right tools. Coming you to tool’s you can use gold to make tools spear or arrow or just as a lump of rock that David used to hit goliath! It has use no matter how you look at it. It’s the “foundation” of any civilization.

Gold to Rise to $2,000 by End of Sept.: UBS Global WM

Aug.03 — Wayne Gordon, executive director for commodities and foreign exchange at UBS Global Wealth Management, discusses the outlook for gold and gold stocks. He speaks with Tom Mackenzie and Rishaad Salamat on “Bloomberg Markets: Asia.”

Gold Futures

A future is simply a deal to trade gold at terms (i.e. amounts and prices) decided now, but with a settlement day in the future. That means you don’t have to pay up just yet (at least not in full) and the seller doesn’t need to deliver you any gold just yet either. It’s as easy as that.

The settlement day is the day when the actual exchange takes place – i.e. when the buyer pays, and the seller delivers the gold. It’s usually up to 3 months ahead.

Most futures traders use the delay to enable them to speculate – both ways. Their intention is to sell anything they have bought, or to buy back anything they have sold, before reaching the settlement day. Then they will only have to settle their gains and losses. In this way they can trade in much larger amounts, and take bigger risks for bigger rewards, than they would be able to if they had to settle their trades as soon as dealt.

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