Shultz's latest letter, just in, is absolutely apocalyptical: "A financial tsunami is upon us," he says, caused by lax credit and complications introduced by Wall Street's derivatives craze.
Among other interesting ideas raised by Schultz in his intense, somewhat terrifying introduction: recession, possibly depression; bank failures; exchange controls; housing prices down by 50%; credit card company failures; money market fund dangers; tripling of U.S. jobless numbers; federal bail-outs for Fannie Mae (FNM) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FRE).
His advice, translated out of his shorthand style: "If you have not already done so, take immediate measures to safeguard your assets against the global derivative crisis ... Most urgent is close out time deposits, buy non-U.S. government bonds."
In other words, Schultz is saying the U.S. banking system is threatened. How's that for a Christmas greeting?
Schultz says "the second biggest danger is owning U.S. dollars in any form, (it) has crashed and going much lower ... use dollar rallies to exit dollars or sell short ... This is not a time to seek profits, but to protect what U have ... Portfolio diversification is essential in troubled times."
Among other interesting ideas raised by Schultz in his intense, somewhat terrifying introduction: recession, possibly depression; bank failures; exchange controls; housing prices down by 50%; credit card company failures; money market fund dangers; tripling of U.S. jobless numbers; federal bail-outs for Fannie Mae (FNM) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FRE).
His advice, translated out of his shorthand style: "If you have not already done so, take immediate measures to safeguard your assets against the global derivative crisis ... Most urgent is close out time deposits, buy non-U.S. government bonds."
In other words, Schultz is saying the U.S. banking system is threatened. How's that for a Christmas greeting?
Schultz says "the second biggest danger is owning U.S. dollars in any form, (it) has crashed and going much lower ... use dollar rallies to exit dollars or sell short ... This is not a time to seek profits, but to protect what U have ... Portfolio diversification is essential in troubled times."
Dec. '07 highs, otherwise not at all shabby.
http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Stor...66821FC09AB%7D
Peter Brimelow picked Schultz's newsletter as "letter of the year 2008" despite it being down 76.05% through Nov. 2008 in this article dated 12/28/08. (Doesn't say a lot perhaps about how Brimelow picks "winners.")
http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Stor...7EG2PnBf2tch6A
Originally posted by Brimelow writing 12/20/08
This is what Schultz thinks now:
Originally posted by Brimelow
Further it seems to me that Schultz doesn't disallow owning commodities, just stocks. That goes along with Rogers and Fabers opinions about the value of commodities.
Comment