| Metals and Tangibles |
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The Core of Diversification When it comes to financial
diversification, it must include a core position in the precious metals
complex. As Wall Street wizard Gerald M. Loeb writes in his book The Battle for Investment Survival,
Diversification is a necessity for the beginner. On the other
hand, the really great fortunes were made by
concentration. Few people realize that Aristotle Onassis
became super wealthy by investing his shipping fortune in gold during
the 1970s, and a similar opportunity exists today. For example,
Warren Buffett is reported to own 40% of the above-ground inventory in
silver, and Bill Gates has recently bought a silver mine. These
billionaires have recognized the need to concentrate some of their
wealth into gold and silver for profit and protection in the past few
years.
Since 2001, precious metals (and base
metals) have been in a secular bull market driven by concerned
investors, industrial demand, hedge funds, and a growing awareness that
capital markets are highly leveraged and geopolitical tensions will
continue to worsen around the world. Gold and silver
have posted significant gains since 2001 and this trend
will likely continue to strengthen despite occasional corrections
along the way. "Contrarian" investors are well advised
to stay the course in these uncertain times. Investing in gold and silver represents
a contrarian strategy that is despised and hated by Wall Street
brokerage firms and their media pundits. Exactly why is?
Precisely because any gains in the precious metals complex suggests
that their financial markets are risky and that their financial advice is
either fundamentally wrong or harmful. Wall Street is a huge paper machine that is
driven by the greater fool theory and a firm reliance on paper currency
(credit expansion) created by the Federal Reserve. Gold and silver
represents the only safe haven against inflated paper assets and paper
currency. As legendary financial analyst Richard Russell has
stated:
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