Marc Faber`s Investment and Trading Ideas - A Tracking Blog About Dr. Marc Faber , Daily Tracking of Dr. Marc Faber Investment Strategy , Market analysis & Outlook and Media appearances
Marc Faber : as the economy does not recover much the central banks around the world will print money and nobody really wants to have a strong currency , what is more important to recognize is the impact on asset market ....I think last friday was an interesting day , first of all we had over the last ten days a lot of negative news and front page articles about that the market strategist expect the S&P to drop and so forth and that government bonds will continue to rally and on Friday we had a key reversal day where stocks close up strongly on the day after having been down in the morning and when bonds tumble , first to understand the market in my opinion will perceive easy move by central banks around the world as being inflationary ...." This transcript was done manually and is far from being accurate.... Marc Faber talks via telephone about the federal reserve money printing
In sum, the current policy approaches here and abroad are unlikely to deliver a durable and robust U.S. recovery and, critically, create sufficient growth in jobs. Yet the main debate in Washington is whether to do more of the same — namely, another fiscal stimulus and another round of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve. This clearly conflicts with evidence that a broader and more holistic response is needed. read the full article >>>
Marc Faber : “I think there isn’t much upside potential in Treasuries unless it’s for the short term. Even the short term is uncertain. But if I look 10 years ahead, where do I want to have my money? Certainly not in U.S. Treasuries.” "In 1999-2000, foreigners also wanted to buy the Nasdaq, and what happened after that was a massive collapse," Faber said. "So I don't see foreign buying as a very intelligent leading indicator." Marc Faber explained that he is 'not interested in buying an asset class that has been in a bull market for 19 years,' and that he would rather place his investments in farmland, agricultural commodities and of course gold.
Marc Faber : Even if the global equity markets including India continue to rebound over the next couple of weeks, I do not think we will be making new highs. It's quite possible that for the current year we have already seen the high made recently. I would be cautious about buying equity including in India. The upside is limited from these levels; the Sensex may make marginal new highs at around 18,000-19,000, but the risk has increased and the days of big moves are over. I think markets will correct. via www.business-standard.com
Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics Inc., talks with Bloomberg's Margaret Brennan about the outlook for the U.S. economy and possibility for another recession. (This report is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)
While some are worried about the risks of inflation, others fear deflation could be a threat. David Wyss, global chief economist at Standard & Poor's weighs in, with guest host Michael Yoshikami of YCMNET Advisors and CNBC's Martin Soong.
Marc Faber : The most common point about every crisis is that in that period there was excessive debt growth, excessive credit growth, excessive leverage and excessive speculations that came about because of the excess credit growth. But the Federal Reserve does not seem to understand that. That is the most common.
The other point I would like to mention is that during such crisis, governments should actually do nothing and let the market adjust from the downside. This is because as prices decline and drop, the affordability improves again and at some point buyers come in and as a result the system is cleaned.
However, if governments intervene with fiscal and monetary measures as the US has done, it sows the seeds for the next crisis. The crises in the post 1980s period such as Tequila, 1994, LTCM, 1998, Nasdaq bubble 2000 are all indicators of this trend. The measures led to formation of a bubble which then caused bubbles in other sectors of the economy. Therefore in my view the interventions which always happen nowadays in the Western democracies are actually not desirable.
source smartinvestor.in
Marc Faber, the publisher of Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, and Peter Schiff, investment strategist at Euro Pacific Capital, discuss US Treasuries with CNBC. “The bond market is the mother of all bubbles right now,” Peter Schiff says. “This decade is going to be the worst decade for bonds in US history.” If you want own Treasuries, Schiff suggests owning them in Switzerland or another country where the government isn’t as reckless as in the US. Marc Faber also advised to avoid US Treasuries he told CNBC recently : "If you look at the different investment alternatives Equities, bonds, real estate, commodities and precious metals ... I think that equities should be represented in a portfolio, in particular, if you are very bearish about the world long-term, you probably be better off in Equities than in bonds. Somebody said before that markets are now highly correlated and that’s true to some extent but not true from other perspective. Say 2008 everything went down and the US dollar rallied and the US government bonds rallied and more recently it’s been when you have a strong day in the stock market bonds go down and so forth. So not everything is correlated and the same applies to agricultural commodities." "I think eventually inflation will accelerate," he said. "Whenever food prices go up, and grains have been very strong recently, with the sum delay, you get inflationary pressures."
10-year treasury yields fell to 2.570%, the weakest level since March 2009. While, the 30-year bond's yield reached 2.719%, the lowest level in 16 months.
Marc Faber cited a weakening U.S. dollar as a second reason to decrease holdings in the US debt.
"(The) U.S. dollar will weaken, that's the policy of the U.S. government to weaken the dollar in order to cushion the downturn in the American economy."
Peter schiff : I am sure I can speak for Mister Marc Faber as well I have met him several times and we agree on this , I think The Bond Market is the mother of all bubbles right now when it burst the loses will dwarf the losses of the combined losses of the stock market bubble and the real estate bubble , no the problem is there is no way for the government to pay this money back the only way they can do that will be a tax increase which is just horrendous and can never be accomplished , or the government gonna have to tell people on social security or medicare that they are not gonna get their checks because the government needs it to pay interests on the debt , and it is not only paying the interest , what i am afraid is that when people realize that we cannot pay this money back we're going to be able to roll all these short term debts so it's not just paying the interest , we gonna have start retiring the principal and that just impossible so it's going to be massive inflation ...."...."this decade is going to be the worst decade for bonds in history , bonds holders are going to be wiped out..."
Marc Faber :"India's long term economic growth should get supported by its huge and growing population. But in the case of China, after it's really incredible economic growth over the last 25 years, the country will slow down. For China, 10 per cent economic growth rate is not sustainable in the long run. India has been built up on much lower level of economic development and has the large growth potential. So far in India, infrastructure has not been put in place, I mean the country's infrastructure has improved but still needs to go a long way. And unlike China, the consumer markets in India are not saturated. For instance in China everybody already has mobile phones and refrigerators. But in India, markets are still not saturated therefore the growth potential is high probably for the next ten to fifteen years." via smartinvestor.in
Marc Faber the publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report, said at a forum in Seoul on last June that cash and bonds will be “very dangerous” in the next 10 years as governments increase money supply to cover fiscal deficits “There’s no other way out but to print money,” . “In the long run, all paper money will go exactly to its intrinsic value, which is zero.” Marc Faber as usual advised investors to protect themselves with assets such as gold and silver. via www.economictimes.indiatimes.com
Marc Faber : "if the Robert Prechter's scenario of the Dow Jones below 1000 comes about which I do not believe but just in case it comes about then Gold may be at $5000 may be it would have gone up who knows , I would rather imagine that in a huge debt contraction that everything will be down then something will be down to zero like paper cash in US dollars , the government bonds will be worthless shares will have some value and gold will have some value "
Some economists have been saying that the US could be headed for a deflationary period just like Japan's "lost decade." Business Insider Gregory White calls for a structural re-think on how the US is spending money. He explains how defense spending isn't putting people to work and cuts need to be made.
Marc Faber : "Governments create problems , Governments are not there to solve problems , they are there to create problems and to take more and more power and freedom from individuals ..."I think in the US the stimulus spending will continue , and in my view the fiscal deficit that's say on an annual basis we are running at 1.5 trillion dollars in the last twelve months , in my view they'll be going up over time to around 2 trillion dollars annually and as far as the eye can see we are never going to have again deficit of less than a trillion dollars a year " "Te government policies are a constrain on the economic growth they are not stimulating economic growth quite on the contrary" "we have a Credit bubble in China and when it will burst we will have some negative consequences" "the big issue in Asia are more of political nature , the tensions in the world are rising between the united States and China , because obviously it should be clear to anyone that China is of course the largest trading partner of North Korea and the great supporter of the North Koreans and this does not please the other Asian nations very much nor the US , so I think we are going into a more difficult environment where other issues than just US fiscal and monetary policies will determine the movement of asset market ""something that the Chinese will not do (in the future) is to continue to accumulate at the same rate they did in the past US treasuries , that won't happen , but whether they sell it right away or reduce the position , question of course also for them is where do you invest I, i think eventually the Chinese will build up their gold reserves and of course strategic reserves like copper or oil because that is in period of conflict would be very difficult to procure for China""so far i have been to some extent surprised that the Chinese were slow to essentially accumulate Gold because we told them already 8 years ago that they should actually increase their gold holdings which they did not do , but i think slowly especially if gold came down to a level below where the Indian central bank , the Reserve bank of India bought its gold because the Chinese they will perceive it as a loss of face if they pay the higher price than the Indians , so if the price drops below around $1050 I think the Chinese will come in""Basically I am optimistic that over time the price of gold will go up in paper currency term , I could also argue that the price of gold stays the same it is just the paper money depreciates against the price of gold , well as ten years ago you had to pay $250 to buy an ounce of gold now you have to pay close to $1200 , so there is a loss of purchasing power of money , a symptom of inflation , I think that over time paper money will lose even more value and so that gold is a store of value , but can it fluctuate , of course we live in a very volatile world , I just want to tell people who are interested in Gold , it is possible that the price of gold drops to $950 dollars if the Robert Prechter's scenario of the Dow Jones below 1000 comes about which I do not believe but just in case it comes about then Gold may be at $5000 may be it would have gone up who knows , I would rather imagine that in a huge debt contraction that everything will be down then something will be down to zero like paper cash in US dollars , the government bonds will be worthless shares will have some value and gold will have some value " "it's very clear that the richest people are not the ones that own government bonds in the long run , nor the ones that own cash but people that own real estate or paintings art or they own equities or they own their own businesses and so forth or mines , mining wells or oil wells and so forth..."
Dr. Marc Faber and Dr. Ron Paul will be keynote speakers at the upcoming Kitco Metals eConference September 12-13, 2010, an online, two-day event showcasing all aspects of the metals industry, with a primary focus on precious metals. A not-to-be missed event .Investment and networking opportunities in metals exploration, mining, manufacturing, processing and end-use applications will be presented and discussed live and in real time you will be able to communicate with the presenters through webcam, text, or email. The eConference is free with Pre- Registration at www.kitcoeconf.com.
David Tice, chief portfolio strategist for bear markets at Federated Investors Inc, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy. Growth in the U.S. slowed to a 2.4 percent annual rate in the second quarter, less than forecast, reflecting a larger trade deficit and an easing in consumer spending.
Dr. Marc Faber who is director of the mining company Ivanhoe Mines which is operating in Mongolia is very optimistic about frontier markets such the Mongolian market , Mongolia is seeing very strong growth, and could be the "Saudi Arabia of Asia", with 2 million people, massive area, and a tremendous amount of resources , he told CNBC recently , Ivanhoe Mines has three risks: Mongolian risks, commodity collapse risks, and its relationship with Rio Tinto . Frontier markets offer a lot of potential now that many emerging markets are becoming developed , Marc Faber explained. Dr. Marc Faber is associated with a variety of funds including the Iconoclastic International Fund, The Baring Chrysalis Fund, The Overlook Partners' Fund, The Income Partners Global Strategy Fund, The India Capital Fund, The Matterhorn India Fund, The Magna Europa Fund plc, The China Mantou Fund and Sofaer Capital Inc.
Mongolia has the potential to be the Saudi Arabia of Asia, says Marc Faber, editor & publisher of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report. He speaks to CNBC's Karen Tso & Bernard Lo about the vast opportunities in the resource rich nation
Marc Faber, editor & publisher of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, says the rise of Asia's middle class will push up demand and add to inflation in the region. He tells CNBC's Bernard Lo & Karen Tso that price levels will continue to rise, particularly in Singapore & Hong Kong
Source: CNBC.com
Mohamed El-Erian :"The basic premise is that we are in the midst of a major national and global realignment. The main catalyst was the financial crisis of 2008, but the underlying factors have been there for a while. The question is: What does the world look like post-realignment? The world is on a bumpy journey to a new destination and the New Normal."
Mohamed El-Erian in an interview with USA TODAY Money reporter Adam Shell on 15 Aug 2010 full interview >>>>
Mohamed A. El-Erian, chief executive officer at Pimco Pacific Investment Management Co., said last week the possibility of deflation and a recession in the U.S. is 25 percent.El-Erian helps run the world's biggest bond fund with more than $1 trillion in assets under management.
"Structural problems need structural solutions" “Forget about being hostage to mindsets that are very cyclical and look broader, because there are some major structural changes -- there’s some major realignment both at the national level and at the global level,” Mohamed El-Erian Told Bloomberg in a radio interview on Aug. 13, 2010 “We should not over-depend on the Fed,” he added. “The Fed does not have enough instruments for what we’re looking at. You need other agencies to get involved. We’re not getting any structural solutions.”
Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Mohammed El-Erian, chief executive officer and co-chief investment officer at Pacific Investment Management Co., discusses Federal Reserve monetary policy. El-Erian, speaking with Tom Keene and Ken Prewitt on Bloomberg Radio's "Bloomberg Surveillance," also discusses deflation and the outlook for the U.S. economy. (This report is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)
Marc Faber : The experiment of the central banks and the fiscal packages that have been inactive by western governments will bitterly fail , but it may first work for a while in the sens that if you have cracks in a building and you put white paint on it it look better for a while . The problem will be that interest payments on the government debt will go up dramatically in the US , so you could end up with essentially a structure where fifty percent of tax revenues will eventually be used just to pay the interest on the government debt at that time the system breaks down than you have to monetize than you go to hyperinflation , hyperinflation usually is bad for the average household , the average household does not participate its real income goes down and then the end is that in order to distract the people from the problems you go to war...you may ask where is the enemy , well for sure the Americans will find someone somewhere , that's for sure , they can invent somebody
Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek, aka The Elvis of cultural theory, is given the floor to show of his polemic style and whirlwind-like performance. The Giant of Ljubljana is bombarded with clips of popular media images and quotes by modern-day thinkers revolving around four major issues: the economical crisis, environment, Afghanistan and the end of democracy. Zizek grabs the opportunity to ruthlessly criticize modern capitalism and to give his view on our common future.
We communists are back! is the closing remark of Slavoj Zižeks provocative performance. Our current capitalist system, that everyone believed would be smoothly spread around the globe, is untenable. We find ourselves on the brink of big problems that call for big solutions. Whatever is left of the left, has been hedged in by western liberal democracy and seems to lack the energy to come up with radical solutions. Not Zižek.
A man whose bad-news predictions are most often on the money, Marc Faber's comments draw the attention of smart financial analysts. During a recent appearance in Abu Dhabi, the pony-tailed guru enthralled investors with his advice on how to survive the volatile world. Brad Reagan reports
In the white marble lobby outside the Al Jaheli theatre at the Armed Forces Officers Club and Hotel in Abu Dhabi, famed investor Marc Faber sits smoking quietly by himself.
The 60 or so financial analysts who are here for Mr Faber’s talk mill about the room, trading business cards and noshing on pastries, either unaware that the man sitting on a love seat in the middle of the room is the main attraction, or are too intimidated to approach him. full article >>>
Dr. Marc Faber in a lecture on asset allocation & tips on gold in Abu Dhabi explained that extreme deflation scenarios are extremely unlikely under the Bernanke Fed , and that he prefers Gold and resource company equities over Cash and US treasuries , he pointed out that with the U.S. so deep in debt the Fed thinks it cannot allow asset prices to drop below a certain point because that would devastate the balance sheets of the banks with debt deflation...
Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Robert Prechter, founder and chief executive officer of Elliot Wave International, talks with Bloomberg's Pimm Fox about the outlook for the U.S. stock market and dollar. He speaks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television's "Taking Stock." (Source: Bloomberg)
Gary Shilling : i think we are heading toward a chronic deflation simply because we are in a world where supply of almost everything is exceeding the demand " the demand is weak , the supply is big also thanks to the new technologies and the globalization says Shilling , shilling recommends bonds over stocks
In an interview WITH CNBC this morning Mohamed El-Erian CEO and and co-CIO of Pimco discussed the dangers of deflation and the remaining options for the Fed and the government.He said that the central bank can only do so much to foster growth and avoid deflation.“Fed policy is not enough. You need to do more than that to get off that road,” eL-eRIAN said.“The country is facing structural issues and it needs structural solutions,” he added. “Just focusing on the Fed is like sending in a wide receiver to play quarterback. Yes, the wide receiver is a good athlete. But he’s not a quarterback and we need to focus on structural issues.”
Investment guru and publisher of The GBD report, Marc Faber, recently wrote in his newsletter, "The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report,"
"Prechter is right when he says that when manias come to an end, prices tend to retreat to where the mania started,” “So from this point of view, a Dow Jones at 1,000 should not be excluded." A Dow 1,000 will be positive for one industry which is the Printing industry Marc Faber says. “Does anyone really think that the money printing presses won't run 24 hours a day?” ... if the Dow falls below 1,000, "Buy a self-sustainable farm in the middle of nowhere 'surrounded by high voltage fences and barbed wire and equipped with booby traps and an arsenal of machine guns, hand grenades and armed vehicles guarded by vicious Dobermans" Marc Faber says
Faber does not rule out the eventuality of a world scale devastating war “The next war will be a dirty war,” "What are you going to do when your mobile phone gets shut down or the internet stops working or the city water supplies get poisoned?” Marc Faber told fund managers in a keynote speech at CLSA’s annual investment forum in Tokyo early this year ,
Nassim Taleb, the author of The best seller "The Black Swan," is quoted as saying:"Every single human being should bet that U.S. Treasury bonds will decline."
Full article : www.arabianmoney.net If Marc Faber had to choose one asset class for the next 10 years it woud be gold. Cash and US treasuries would be be his least preferred decennial investment. US equities would be a reasonable choice for wealth protection, though not necessarily grow much when adjusted for inflation. This was the broad message that the author of The Gloom, Boom and Doom Report delivered to a CPA Institute meeting last night in Abu Dhabi, home of the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority. No deflationary bust He began by explaining why extreme deflation scenarios are extremely unlikely under the Bernanke Fed, comparing the Fed chairman’s commitment to an anti-deflation strategy to Hitler’s Mein Kampf, a book that also clearly stated a policy program in advance but was not widely believed until it was too late.
Full interview www.sqstudy.org EL-ERIAN: You know, Tom, all this speaks to what Ben Bernanke coined last week as the unusually uncertain outlook. Whether you look at the data, which is pointing in all sorts of directions, whether you look at the earnings, what we’re getting right now is very, very noisy picture. And it points to an uncertain outlook. Now, there’s two ways to think about this. One is, as you mentioned, certain data of backward looking, others are forward looking. The other thing – way to think about it is the reality that during regime shifts, data gets very noisy because you’re shifting from one regime to another and our inclination is the latter. Our inclination is to think of this as natural for a regime shift and we’re moving from a regime of high growth, leveraging, debt and credit entitlement to a more delivered, slower-growing, higher unemployment world.
“Investors should’ve listened to me already six months ago, when I wrote that the Fed will continue to monetize, and this is my view , they will never let up ? … they will print and print and print, until the final crisis wipes out the entire system,” Marc Faber
“I think that massive quantitative easing will come between say 870 to 950 on the S&P and my inclination is to believe that the July first low at 1010 will actually hold , and that the worst the economy becomes the more they’ll print money and the more equities can go up,” Marc Faber.
Marc Faber : "If you look at the different investment alternatives Equities, bonds, real estate, commodities and precious metals ... I think that equities should be represented in a portfolio, in particular, if you are very bearish about the world long-term, you probably be better off in Equities than in bonds.
Somebody said before that markets are now highly correlated and that’s true to some extent but not true from other perspective. Say 2008 everything went down and the US dollar rallied and the US government bonds rallied and more recently it’s been when you have a strong day in the stock market bonds go down and so forth. So not everything is correlated and the same applies to agricultural commodities." in a recent interview with CNBC
Marc Faber : "Investors should have listened to me already six months ago , when I wrote that the Fed would continue to monetize and this is my view...they will never let up. They will print and print and print, until the final crisis wipes out the entire system. They are very bad forecasters of economic events in particular that was the case for Mr Greenspan but Mr Bernanke is in the same boat. He has no clue what the economy is doing and so they misread in 2007 the severity of the forthcoming crises and then they misread the last few months the strength of the economy, which shows no signs of strengthening but signs of weakening everywhere in the world and therefore I would argue that the Federal Reserve with its policy, and with the writings and papers Mr Bernanke has published about the great depression, that more quantitative easing will be forthcoming and significantly more.
Let’s say they push money into the system that is true it may not go into stimulating capital investments, it may not go into consumption but it will go somewhere. Now this somewhere in the last few years has been mainly emerging economies that have accumulated huge foreign exchange reserves as a result of the US trade and current account deficit that led to the surpluses in these emerging economies. There isn’t outlet for excessive money creation. It can be in agricultural commodities or it can be in emerging economies or one day it could in wages in the United States I do not think it will happen. But we have inflationary pressures in emerging economies and eventually I suppose that this labor arbitrage in the world and the imbalances over-consumption in the US and capital spending and essentially savings in emerging economies , that this will lead to a readjustments of currencies and also to a readjustments of cost in other word that labor cost in emerging economies will go up substantially whereas in the Western world they will be flat to down in other words that real wages in the Western world will decline. But in this environment, you can’t be overly dogmatic. There will be a lot of bouts of inflation ...sudden explosions in prices like last year. Everybody in the world has some concerns about the ultimate value of the US dollar and also obviously about the value of US government bonds, because if the fiscal deficits stay at this level and in my opinion, they are likely to actually increase over time, then you will have a credit problem in US, sooner or later. It will not happen in next three years, but thereafter. So I think that the diversification out of US dollar treasuries is desirable and that’s why I am not all that negative about equities.
If you look at the different investment alternatives Equities, bonds, real estate, commodities and precious metals ... I think that equities should be represented in a portfolio, in particular, if you are very bearish about the world long-term, you probably be better off in Equities than in bonds. Somebody said before that markets are now highly correlated and that’s true to some extent but not true from other perspective. Say 2008 everything went down and the US dollar rallied and the US government bonds rallied and more recently it’s been when you have a strong day in the stock market bonds go down and so forth. So not everything is correlated and the same applies to agricultural commodities.
I wrote already six months ago that unlike any other commodity the agricultural commodities had gone down in 2009 certainly unlike the industrial commodities and that wheat was, at the beginning of the year, at 200 years low in real terms and when food prices move they move a lot and they have a huge impact on the world because there are studies that have been made by the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis that show that actually food prices are a leading indicator of inflation. So I think that at the agricultural sector is actually quite attractive. There are two factors in agriculture ...obviously demand, expanding when you have people moving from poverty to the middle class and than to more affluent class they eat more specially protein rich types of food and then you have the other impact that is more meaningful and this is supply interruptions by droughts and floods and so forth. This year we have a lot of unusual weather. We have floods in Pakistan and we have heat waves in Russia and so forth that may disrupt crops." ..This transcript was made manually and hence it is very approximate...
“You can talk all day long about the good economic numbers that came out …but you also have to look at a 10-year treasury yield that’s below 3 percent and some economic signs that really aren’t that good,” Joe Clark, founder and CIO of Financial Enhancement, told CNBC, when asked if he felt we're in a bull or bear market. Marc Faber : well basically my view is this , the market if it goes to below 1000 , we all , you as employees of CNBC and I would not have a job we will have other problems in this world most banks will be bust , the government will be bust and your deposit will not be worth very much ...so if it goes to 1000 actually you may be better off being in shares than in bonds than in government bonds and bank deposits , secondly i am outlining in that report that I do not below we will go to 1000 , i think that massive quantitative easing will come between say 870 to 950 on the S&P and my inclination is to believe that the July first low at 1010 will actually hold , and that the worst the economy becomes the more they'll print money and the more equities can go up ...that is my view I am ultra bearish about everything but in this scenario of being ultra bearish about everything you probably can be better off in equities in the long run than in bonds and in cash ....
Marc Faber : “Investors should’ve listened to me already six months ago, when I wrote that the Fed will continue to monetize, and this is my view , they will never let up ? ... they will print and print and print, until the final crisis wipes out the entire system,” Marc Faber, editor & publisher of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, told CNBC. David Bloom from HSBC joined the discussion, adding, "I think we're not quite at those draconian points."
Marc Faber continues : "they are very bad forecasters of economic events , in particular that was the case for mister Greenspan , but Mister Bernanke is in the same boat , he has no clue what the economy's doing , and so they misread in 2007 the severity of the forthcoming crisis and then they misread in the last few months the strength of the economy which is unlike your commentator before just said shows no sign of strengthening but signs of of weakening everywhere in the world and therefor I would argue that the federal reserve with its policy and with the writings and papers mister Bernanke has published about the great depression that more quantitative easing will be forthcoming , and significantly more...."
Marc Faber continues : well i think that everybody in the world has concerns about the ultimate value of the US dollar and also obviously about the value of the US government bonds because if the fiscal deficit stays at this level , in my opinion they are actually going to increase overtime and obviously you will have a credit problem in the United States soon or late , it is not gonna happen in the next three years but thereafter , so I think that diversification out of the US dollar treasuries is desirable and that's why I am not all that negative about Equities , i think that if you look at the different investment alternatives Equities bonds real estate commodities and precious metals , I think that equities should be presented in a portfolio ...in particular if you are very bearish about the world in the long term , you probably be better off in equities than in bonds ......
Marc Faber : “I mean I’ve been arguing this year that the economy would inevitably slow down, because the impact of the stimulus would diminish. But having said that, the economy hasn’t crashed yet. It could still crash. But on the other hand, if you look at the performance of equities worldwide, it seems that the worse the economic news is, that the more the markets go up, because the market participants expect further easing measures, and maybe further stimulus. So altogether I would say it’s not going to be a disaster for stock investors yet. It’s interesting. The Chinese stock market began to discount the slowdown in economic growth actually precisely a year ago, in August, 2009. The market peaked out. And then drifted lower, but now that the bad news is essentially out, the market has started to rebound.”
” I’d like to make the following observation. We have a global economy, and an economy has different sectors. And you can have recession in some sectors of the economy. You can have a crash, say, in the property market, and you can have other sectors expanding."
when Marc Faber was asked about the overheating of the Chinese property market he answers :
"Well, I’m not sure. Because if the ease of again, the speculation will go on. But we have credit problems in the property market undoubtedly. We have Ponzi schemes like of loan sharking operations all over China. That’s a very dangerous, and so forth . But what I would like to point out is that the agricultural sector, the rural sector in China and everywhere in the world is doing relatively well, because agricultural prices have started to rebound. And that was also seen in Thailand. In Thailand, new car sales are up very strongly.” Marc Faber is asked if he believes the Chinese government will delay increasing interest rates this year : Marc Answers :
“I think even if they increase it marginally it’s meaningless. Because interest rates are far below nominal GDP growth, and in my opinion far below inflation.”
This transcript was done manually and it is very approximate.....
Aug. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Marc Faber, publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, discusses China's economy. Faber, speaking with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack," also talks about Chinese stocks and interest-rate policy. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)
Marc Faber from Zurich in Switzerland : I have been arguing this year that the economy would inevitably slow down because the impact of the stimulus will diminish , but having said that , he economy hasn't crashed yet , it could still crash but on the other hand if you look at the performance of equities worldwide it seems that the worse the economic news is that the more the market goes up because the market participants expect further easing measures and may be further stimulus so all together I would say it's not going to be a disaster for stock investors yet and it is interesting that the Chinese stock market begun to discount the slowdown in economic growth , actually precisely a year ago in August 2009 the market peaked out and then drifted lower but now that the bad news is essentially out , the market has started to rebound ...etc...
Marc Faber says if the Dow falls below 1,000, "Buy a self-sustainable farm in the middle of nowhere 'surrounded by high voltage fences and barbed wire and equipped with booby traps and an arsenal of machine guns, hand grenades and armed vehicles guarded by vicious Dobermans". He was responding to Robert Prechter, who predicted the DOW to fall below 1000 basing his interpretation of Elliot Waves, Fibonacci numbers and socioeconomic trends believes that the stock market is historically overvalued in terms of dividends and earnings, because of a "great rise in positive social mood'
If you have to buy stocks make it Asian equities and REIT's in Thailand, Singapore, and Malaysia. They have high yields and are attractive compared to 3% 10 year treasuries. Asian economies will continue to grow at a healthy clip even with weakness in the US and Europe, which makes them good investments. Marc Faber in the August edition of the GBD
“The next war will be a dirty war,” "What are you going to do when your mobile phone gets shut down or the internet stops working or the city water supplies get poisoned?” Marc Faber told fund managers in a keynote speech at CLSA’s annual investment forum in Tokyo early this year ,
“When I tell people to prepare themselves for a dirty war, they ask me: “America against whom?” I tell them that for sure they will find someone.” Marc Faber added
"Buy a self-sustainable farm in the middle of nowhere 'surrounded by high voltage fences and barbed wire and equipped with booby traps and an arsenal of machine guns, hand grenades and armed vehicles guarded by vicious Dobermans". That was Marc Faber suggestion for trading the DOW below 1,000...
"When the turn comes and inflation and rates rise, all the money in bonds will move into equities." "At some point people won't want to be compensated at two percent in bonds, and will put money into stocks. Government bonds will not be a good investment for the next 10 years." in newsblogs.chicagotribune.com
"I'm a believer that the stock market lows of March 2009 will not be revisited. You have people like Robert Prechter who think the Dow will collapse to 700 because of debt deleveraging. Debt deleveraging could happen, but the Dow will not fall because of monetary policy. The Fed will keep everything inflated in nominal terms. And if the Dow does go to 700, you'll have more to worry about than your investments. All the banks will be bust. The government will be bust. You don't want cash if massive deflation happens. On the contrary: It will be worthless. You have to think very carefully about hardcore deflation." in fool.com
Economist David Rosenberg and investor Marc Faber have wagered a bottle of scotch whiskey on whether U.S. 10-year Treasury yields can go lower than 2 percent:
“If I lose the bet, I buy him a bottle of Cutty Sark, and if I win, I want a bottle of Dalwhinnie”
"Prechter is right when says that when manias come to an end, prices tend to retreat to where the mania started. So from this point of view, a Dow Jones at 1,000 should not be excluded," ."It is likely that if the Dow where to fall by more than 20 percent from the present level there would be further massive fiscal and monetary stimulus packages – not just in the US but worldwide," Marc Faber wrote in the In the August edition of the ‘The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report’"The question here is really, with the Dow below 1,000, what kind of dollars – and especially what kind of dollar credits – will survive," via CNBC.com
Dr Marc Faber was born in Zurich, Switzerland. He went to school in Geneva and Zurich and finished high school with the Matura. He studied Economics at the University of Zurich and, at the age of 24, obtained a PhD in Economics magna cum laude. Between 1970 and 1978, Dr Faber worked for White Weld & Company Limited in New York, Zurich and Hong Kong. Since 1973, he has lived in Hong Kong. From 1978 to February 1990, he was the Managing Director of Drexel Burnham Lambert (HK) Ltd. In June 1990, he set up his own business, which acts as an investment advisor and fund manager.
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