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Millionaire Now! by Larry NusbaumThis blog is based on the organizational principles found in my new book, "Millionaire Now! - A Financial Toolbox with Seven Steps to Wealth". |
BEWARE THE NET-WORTH TRANSFERENCE SCHEME
Posted on 09/22/2006 10:08 AM | Link | Post Comment
Wall Street is a financial product machine. http://www.millionairenowbook.blogspot.com/
It makes products, then "sells" them to you and I for a commission. Sometimes it sells them outright. That's one commission. Sometimes it sells that it will manage the bet for you. That's many commissions for a long time. Better still, Wall Street often gets it up front -- long before you earn a nickel.
The odds are stacked against you. Yet it's amazing how many of us fall for their sales pitch.
There are lessons for us all:
1. When an area of investing gets too popular, it gets overpriced and ripe for a fall. This means you have to be nimble. Grab a small profit. Moves your stops up. Set a tight stop loss. And get out.
2. The problem then is "How do you put your new cash money to work?" That's one of Wall Street's great myths. There's no such thing as "putting your money to work." That's their euphemism for gambling. There is absolutely nothing wrong with having your money in cash. Follow an old tired aphorism: "When in doubt, stay out."
3. That means you have to be ultra-patient. It means super-patient. Cash is good. It's as good as money, and in many respects, better than happiness. Money will buy happiness. Happiness won't buy money.
4. It's perfectly reasonable to make only one trade a year. A friend invested $1 million in a company he felt comfortable with because his people had done the due diligence. In a few months (after one year and a day have elapsed) his investment will be worth $1.6 million.
5. When information is imperfect, that's your advantage. There are too many smart people with more information on public things -- like stocks and commodities -- than you will have. Even if you devoted your life to studying that area. Stick with stuff five people know something about. Only five people. The apartment building across the road. The company you're the only buyer of. Stay away from crowds. I recommend you read "The Wisdom of Crowds" by James Surowiecki and "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds"by Charles MacKay.
6. Don't buy into a fund of funds. They're sold by Wall Street because of "diversification." But .... you don't know what you're buying into. Your fund of funds may buy into a Amaranth, with heavy energy exposure, which you may not want.
7. Don't buy into vehicles with a long lock-up period. That severely limits your flexibility.
8. And don't buy into vehicles where you don't know what your brilliant management is doing.

These two paragraphs from yesterday's Wall Street Journal are indicative:
Much as they did with tech-oriented investments shortly before they tanked in 2000, individual investors also have rushed into commodities, via stocks of commodity-related companies and mutual funds that specialize in such investments. There are 48 mutual funds that invest in commodities and related shares managing $56 billion, up from 34 funds with less than $10 billion three years ago, according to fund tracker Morningstar Inc. The Commodity Real Return fund of Allianz AG's Pacific Investment Management Co. has grown to more than $12.2 billion, from $8 billion about a year ago.
The 13th-largest holder of gold in the world isn't a central bank but an exchange-traded fund, a type of security that trades like a stock and tracks the price of an underlying investment class. StreetracksGold Trust, the largest gold ETF, has assets of $7.5 billion, up from $2.7 billion a year ago, mostly from new investments.
It makes products, then "sells" them to you and I for a commission. Sometimes it sells them outright. That's one commission. Sometimes it sells that it will manage the bet for you. That's many commissions for a long time. Better still, Wall Street often gets it up front -- long before you earn a nickel.
The odds are stacked against you. Yet it's amazing how many of us fall for their sales pitch.
There are lessons for us all:
1. When an area of investing gets too popular, it gets overpriced and ripe for a fall. This means you have to be nimble. Grab a small profit. Moves your stops up. Set a tight stop loss. And get out.
2. The problem then is "How do you put your new cash money to work?" That's one of Wall Street's great myths. There's no such thing as "putting your money to work." That's their euphemism for gambling. There is absolutely nothing wrong with having your money in cash. Follow an old tired aphorism: "When in doubt, stay out."
3. That means you have to be ultra-patient. It means super-patient. Cash is good. It's as good as money, and in many respects, better than happiness. Money will buy happiness. Happiness won't buy money.
4. It's perfectly reasonable to make only one trade a year. A friend invested $1 million in a company he felt comfortable with because his people had done the due diligence. In a few months (after one year and a day have elapsed) his investment will be worth $1.6 million.
5. When information is imperfect, that's your advantage. There are too many smart people with more information on public things -- like stocks and commodities -- than you will have. Even if you devoted your life to studying that area. Stick with stuff five people know something about. Only five people. The apartment building across the road. The company you're the only buyer of. Stay away from crowds. I recommend you read "The Wisdom of Crowds" by James Surowiecki and "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds"by Charles MacKay.
6. Don't buy into a fund of funds. They're sold by Wall Street because of "diversification." But .... you don't know what you're buying into. Your fund of funds may buy into a Amaranth, with heavy energy exposure, which you may not want.
7. Don't buy into vehicles with a long lock-up period. That severely limits your flexibility.
8. And don't buy into vehicles where you don't know what your brilliant management is doing.

These two paragraphs from yesterday's Wall Street Journal are indicative:
Much as they did with tech-oriented investments shortly before they tanked in 2000, individual investors also have rushed into commodities, via stocks of commodity-related companies and mutual funds that specialize in such investments. There are 48 mutual funds that invest in commodities and related shares managing $56 billion, up from 34 funds with less than $10 billion three years ago, according to fund tracker Morningstar Inc. The Commodity Real Return fund of Allianz AG's Pacific Investment Management Co. has grown to more than $12.2 billion, from $8 billion about a year ago.
The 13th-largest holder of gold in the world isn't a central bank but an exchange-traded fund, a type of security that trades like a stock and tracks the price of an underlying investment class. StreetracksGold Trust, the largest gold ETF, has assets of $7.5 billion, up from $2.7 billion a year ago, mostly from new investments.
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- THE END OF THE GRAND SUPERCYCLE?
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Examples
Morpheus Trading - Mon Jul 21, 2008 08:33AM
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them if [read more]
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them if [read more]
Morpheus Trading - Mon Jul 21, 2008 08:31AM
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them i [read more]
NOTE: Please click on the charts below to enlarge them i [read more]
Millionaire Now! by Larry Nusbaum - Tue Jul 22, 2008 09:23AM
Hedge funds have made billions this year shorting the banks, [read more]
Hedge funds have made billions this year shorting the banks, [read more]












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