Re: Roubini: No Poom
Im an amateur trader/investor. I read Schiff back in March. Read EJ a bit later. Have followed Rogers regularly and listen carefully to everything he says. Have read Roubini and have listened particularly to Marc Faber.
Being a good long term analyst and being a good short term trader are two entirely different things. As a long term analyst, I remain a bull on gold and silver. But earlier this year I took a hit: £1,000 on my PM trading (I have some physical too - but that's not for trading; that's an insurance policy).
After that hit (the first time I lost any money as an investor), I changed course - looked at the "deleveraging process" and decided to stay totally liquid. Avoided Bonds, Equities and Commodities like the plague and went all guns blazing into the Yen by shorting the Pound. I don't like to brag because bragging is stupid (it comes back to bite you) - but I am up 25 percent this year on my trading (i.e. return on capital is about 25 percent so far), and the year isn't out yet. I am back in the silver trade because of the gigantic correction but haven't taken a gold position.
My "advice" for what its worth to the likes of Phirang and others who have lost money by following Schiff or EJ or Rogers or anyone else is this: trading and analysis are two different things. Trading is all about timing. If you are right in the long run and you get your trades right, you will make money even if your short term timing is bad. But if you get your short term timing good, then returns would be much better. Once you choose to put your money on the line, you can blame no one but yourself for losing money. Trading is all about cutting losses and running when it goes against you. That is what I did - when I started losing money, I cut my losses and ran. That's cowardly but you live to fight another day.
The day the Dollar faces doom shall come. Check out Marc Faber's interview - unlike Rogers or Schiff, Faber isn't given to hyperbole. He says it honestly and without exaggeration. He said he was convinced the US will go bankrupt. What happens to America's currency when that happens is an open question - or is it?
Im an amateur trader/investor. I read Schiff back in March. Read EJ a bit later. Have followed Rogers regularly and listen carefully to everything he says. Have read Roubini and have listened particularly to Marc Faber.
Being a good long term analyst and being a good short term trader are two entirely different things. As a long term analyst, I remain a bull on gold and silver. But earlier this year I took a hit: £1,000 on my PM trading (I have some physical too - but that's not for trading; that's an insurance policy).
After that hit (the first time I lost any money as an investor), I changed course - looked at the "deleveraging process" and decided to stay totally liquid. Avoided Bonds, Equities and Commodities like the plague and went all guns blazing into the Yen by shorting the Pound. I don't like to brag because bragging is stupid (it comes back to bite you) - but I am up 25 percent this year on my trading (i.e. return on capital is about 25 percent so far), and the year isn't out yet. I am back in the silver trade because of the gigantic correction but haven't taken a gold position.
My "advice" for what its worth to the likes of Phirang and others who have lost money by following Schiff or EJ or Rogers or anyone else is this: trading and analysis are two different things. Trading is all about timing. If you are right in the long run and you get your trades right, you will make money even if your short term timing is bad. But if you get your short term timing good, then returns would be much better. Once you choose to put your money on the line, you can blame no one but yourself for losing money. Trading is all about cutting losses and running when it goes against you. That is what I did - when I started losing money, I cut my losses and ran. That's cowardly but you live to fight another day.
The day the Dollar faces doom shall come. Check out Marc Faber's interview - unlike Rogers or Schiff, Faber isn't given to hyperbole. He says it honestly and without exaggeration. He said he was convinced the US will go bankrupt. What happens to America's currency when that happens is an open question - or is it?
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