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52   Goran_K   2012 Jul 6, 5:34am  

tiny tina says

That's absolutely not true. I gave you specifics all the way down to a house in Cupertino.

You did that to the universal mockery of the forum, and 7 dislikes on your posting. But yes, let's move on, I think that would be best.

53   freak80   2012 Jul 6, 5:34am  

Bulls and Bears:

Place your bets.

Anyone can make a fortune investing with 20/20 hindsight. Even me!

54   Goran_K   2012 Jul 6, 5:35am  

wthrfrk80 says

Anyone can make a fortune investing with 20/20 hindsight. Even me!

Exactly. My. Point.

Monday morning quarterbacks have a 100% success rate.

55   tiny tina   2012 Jul 6, 5:40am  

I guess I don't get the monday morning quarterbacking. I bought a house in the BA after waiting for many years. There's my bet.

If you guys are bears, go short the housing sector or whatever. Publicly document your transaction. Waiting...

56   tiny tina   2012 Jul 6, 6:54am  

doo-da-doo

57   tiny tina   2012 Jul 6, 6:56am  

So, any bears or other followers of Schiff going to post their recent shorts of the market? What happened to "place your bets"?

58   Goran_K   2012 Jul 6, 8:26am  

Are you sure those are cash-flow positive? One of them isn't even for sale, it last sold for $710,000.

59   zesta   2012 Jul 6, 8:57am  

Goran_K says

That's the thing. You and people like tiny tina keep insisting that what Peter described in 2002 wasn't special.

Sure, it's easy to say that in 2012, after the fact, but where were you and tina's publications or even web articles stating that housing was heading for an imminent crash, and that Gold was going to triple in price.

Why aren't you two nationally known economist that get paid lots of money to talk about the economy like Peter Schiff?

When it comes down to it, two anonymous internet trolls who think they "knew" how things were going to go down is meaningless, and that's why Peter Schiff is a nationally known economist whose opinion people pay for, talk and write about, and why you two troll on Patrick.net for free.

Well first off his timing in 2002 was wrong. This had brought up multiple times by multiple posters, but I'll try it one more time. Scientific evidence tells me that our sun will eventually become a red giant and the Earth's time will come to an end. The "fundamentals" are there. Now, am I an oracle if I say: "The world is coming to an end" In your eyes I would be right, because I'm basing it on solid evidence.

Do a quick search on the internet and see how many people you can find that predicted a huge pop in gold. It happens during every crisis and conflict.

At the very least, can you admit that he's not 100% correct? There are many instances that have been brought up where he's either been wrong in timing or wrong completely.

What does it matter that people pay him to talk/write and invest. As mentioned earlier, people pay Ben Bernanke and his predictions don't mean anything.

60   CL   2012 Jul 6, 9:34am  

robertoaribas says

I predicted that housing would crash in 1965... OK, so I was approximately 41 years early, I was still right!

I predicted talking pictures...in 1968!

61   clambo   2012 Jul 6, 10:07am  

The reason Schiff is wrong is that the stock market is exhuberant since Bernake keeps interest rates so low and Europe is so fuct that people buy mega large stocks when they realize there is no other game in town.
1. Deposit in a bank. You nuts? Lending your capital and being paid nothing?
2. US Treasury debt? See #1.
3. Gold? It's never going to grow or appreciate capital and compounding interest also does not apply. It will preserve your money so it's slighty better than money in a bank.
4. Anything else?
Schiff can give us the logical reasons people with money won't buy things like stocks. The problem is they don't care they are more afraid of being broke in 10 years than their fear of the stock market possibly collapsing.
Stocks, dividends, corporate bonds compounding, etc. makes money over time.

62   dunnross   2012 Jul 6, 10:27am  

clambo says

3. Gold? It's never going to grow or appreciate capital and compounding interest also does not apply. It will preserve your money so it's slighty better than money in a bank.

In the last ten years gold has outperformed the S&P 6x1. However, since they are still lots of people like you, who are saying that gold is just for capital preservation, it will continue to outperform the market. Look for Gold to Dow ratio of 1/1 within the next 2 years.

63   freak80   2012 Jul 6, 10:39am  

dunnross says

Look for Gold to Dow ratio of 1/1 within the next 2 years.

Are you putting your money where your mouth is?

Anyone can make predictions. How many are willing to bet money on those positions?

64   zesta   2012 Jul 6, 11:15am  

Goran_K says

How was it wrong? He never said housing would crash IN 2002.

When you watch his videos and read his quotes, what year do you think he was predicting that housing would crash?

65   clambo   2012 Jul 6, 11:16am  

I don't care about gold because it 1. cannot grow (i.e. get heavier in my safe) 2. cannot pay dividends 3. cannot pay interest.
TODAY gold is expensive and I would buy some if I were rich but I would rather just have a Swiss account and be done with worrying about our US Dollar becoming ever more worthless.
AAPL can 1. pay divends 2. grow business 3. grow profits
They only sold 72 millon iPhones in the last 6 months, such a pity.

However, I told my father 3 years ago if I were in his shoes and wanted to play around with that cash in the coffee can he does not need he could buy 1. swiss francs 2. AAPL 3. gold etf, backed by swiss bank gold deposits.
I believe the gold eft is "zkbgf".

66   JodyChunder   2012 Jul 6, 2:40pm  

robertoaribas says

takes horse blinders!

Blinkers.

67   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 12:29am  

clambo says

TODAY gold is expensive and I would buy some if I were rich but I would rather just have a Swiss account and be done with worrying about our US Dollar becoming ever more worthless.

Gold is not expensive. Even, if you believe the faulty gov't CPI numbers, in real terms, it's still cheaper than it was back in 1980. Silver is cheaper than it was in 1980, even in nominal terms. Do you know anything else in the world which is cheaper now than it was back in 1980? For gold, it costs close to $1000, today, just to take it out of the ground, not to mention, that you have to find it, research it, and construct the mine, which takes 5-10 years. AAPL is expensive. Its stock price is almost 6 times its book value. It's basically a toy company, and toys are the first things people can live without, in a recession. Gold does pay dividends (0.5% annual lease rate), unlike AAPL which pays no dividends.

68   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 1:14am  

robertoaribas says

is the dow jones under 2000?

This secular bear market isn't over yet. Schiff predicted that the bear market would start in 2000 (which it did), and would last for another 5-10 years after that, but, what he didn't consider was the FED trying to re-inflate the bubble, every step of the way, which leads to a giant extension of the bear market. As it stands now, this bear market will probably last for another decade or two, and because of inflation, the DOW will probably not fall to 2000. However, in real terms (ie 2000 dollars), it would probably fall below 2000. A good way to track the "real price" of the DOW is to consider its price relative to ounces of gold. In 2000, the DOW was around 12K, and gold was $300, which would mean that 1 DOW could buy 40 oz of gold. Today, the DOWN is again 12K, but gold is $1600, which means that 1 DOW can only buy 7.5 oz of gold. So, in terms of the gold currency, the DOW is now down 5.3 times from the peak, which means, in 2000 dollars, it's price is now $2250, quite close to Schiff's lower estimate of $2000.

69   zesta   2012 Jul 7, 4:06am  

dunnross says

Gold is not expensive. Even, if you believe the faulty gov't CPI numbers, in real terms, it's still cheaper than it was back in 1980. Silver is cheaper than it was in 1980, even in nominal terms. Do you know anything else in the world which is cheaper now than it was back in 1980? For gold, it costs close to $1000, today, just to take it out of the ground, not to mention, that you have to find it, research it, and construct the mine, which takes 5-10 years. AAPL is expensive. Its stock price is almost 6 times its book value. It's basically a toy company, and toys are the first things people can live without, in a recession. Gold does pay dividends (0.5% annual lease rate), unlike AAPL which pays no dividends

Valued in gold, housing prices are pretty much at historical lows. Lower than in 60s and 70s. Does that make housing exceptionally affordable?

70   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 4:46am  

zesta says

Valued in gold, housing prices are pretty much at historical lows. Lower than in 60s and 70s. Does that make housing exceptionally affordable?

That depends on where you are looking. In mine and patrick's neck of the woods, it still takes close to 1000 gold coins to buy anything even resembling a house. In 1980, this same house would have been worth only 100 gold coins. That means that houses in the Bay Area are still extremely overpriced.

71   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 6:38am  

robertoaribas says

But you really need to get help for your pathetic jealoous obsession with me...

Ya right! I am jealous of a Berkeley flunk-out who lives in a 120 degree heat and thinks that he knows math.

72   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 7:07am  

Sheesh I didn't know investing could get so personal. At least on a stock exchange floor the bulls and bears fight each other in a totally anonymous, impersonal manner.

73   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 7:17am  

zesta says

Valued in gold, housing prices are pretty much at historical lows. Lower than in 60s and 70s. Does that make housing exceptionally affordable?

That's the thing. Value is all "relative." There is no "absolute" yardstick.

It's all about RELATIVE scarcity. If dollars are plentiful, and gold is scarce, you will have to trade a lot of dollars for gold. If a bunch of gold is discovered or dumped on the market via Cash4Gold, the scarcity of gold will drop relative to dollars (assuming "helicopter Ben" doesn't print any more money). Same with dollars to silver, euros to dollars, silver to bread, bread to oil, etc etc. Same principle.

I don't know of any asset who's value remains absolutely constant relative to the value of a basket of every other good/service.

To me, investing seems like millions of people in a huge room madly exchanging "this for that" assuming they know "this" will go down in value relative to "that."

74   marcus   2012 Jul 7, 7:30am  

dunnross says

A good way to track the "real price" of the DOW is to consider its price relative to ounces of gold. In 2000, the DOW was around 12K, and gold was $300, which would mean that 1 DOW could buy 40 oz of gold. Today, the DOWN is again 12K, but gold is $1600, which means that 1 DOW can only buy 7.5 oz of gold. So, in terms of the gold currency, the DOW is now down 5.3 times from the peak, which means, in 2000 dollars, it's price is now $2250, quite close to Schiff's lower estimate of $2000.

You have to be kidding. If not you are one confused puppy. Talk about convoluted.

You could similarly make an argument that somehow the dollar inflationary fears or expectations reflected in the price of gold, simultaneously indicate the all time worst deflation we have even seen.

Who knew ? That is, who knew that everything from the price of a car, the the price of bacon or shoes, had dropped by so much ? By your reasoning, even the price of college or health care "in 2000 dollars" is way less then a third of what it was then.

Who knew ?

75   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 7:43am  

marcus says

Who knew ? That is, who knew that everything from the price of a car, the the price of bacon or shoes, had dropped by so much ? By your reasoning, even the price of college or health care "in 2000 dollars" is way less then a third of what it was then.

Who knew ?

Yeah it's great! The gold coin my grandpa gave me back in 2000 can buy so much more stuff now! We're so much more efficient than we were back then! And we have so much more farmland and oil than we had back then and far fewer people in the world to consume it!

Or maybe it's just that markets are efficient. And the "inflation paranoia factor" is already "priced in."

Good luck to all of you gold bugs out there...

76   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 7:45am  

Clearly gold is immune from speculative frenzy and should be used as an absolute frame of reference. ;-)

77   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:25am  

wthrfrk80 says

Clearly gold is immune from speculative frenzy and thus should always be used as an absolute frame of reference. ;-)

Gold is not immune to speculative frenzy. However, you know that gold has been around since the Babylonian war, and all the fiat currencies which ever existed had to succumb to it, in the end. One thing, for sure, is that all the currencies in existence today will not be around 100 years from now, but the gold currency will live on, and you will still be able to buy a tailored suite (or its equivalent) for an oz of gold 100 years from now, just like you can today, and just like you could 100 years ago.

78   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:31am  

marcus says

By your reasoning, even the price of college or health care "in 2000 dollars" is way less then a third of what it was then.

Yes it did, because since 2000 we are living in a deflationary world (exactly like Peter predicted). Only the suckers who worshiped the all-mighty dollar lost purchasing power. But, if you keep worshiping the all-mighty dollar, you will lose even more. Just ask some people in Argentina, Brazil, Soviet Union or Zimbabwe how their currencies fared against the govt who is deep in debt like ours is, today.
And when you say - who knew? I know 2 people, 1 is myself, and the other one is Peter Schiff.

79   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 8:44am  

dunnross says

One thing, for sure, is that all the currencies in existence today will not be around 100 years from now, but the gold currency will live on, and you will still be able to buy a tailored suite (or its equivalent) for an oz of gold 100 years from now, just like you can today, and just like you could 100 years ago.

True, but if you buy gold at a peak you'll still lose. Big time. And after 100 years we're all dead.

80   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:45am  

wthrfrk80 says

And we have so much more farmland and oil than we had back then and far fewer people in the world to consume it!

Gold price has surpassed it's pre-recession all time-high. None of the other commodities have. Does anybody on this blog have an answer to why gold is the only commodity that surpassed it's pre-recession high? Wait I do. Because gold is not really a commodity. Unlike all the other commodities (including housing) it's not tied to the credit market, which is currently unraveling itself, so its price is a direct measure of how much "real money" or the so-called "reserves" is going into the economy from all the money printing. All the other commodities are tied to the "credit money" which is the multiple of the "real money" which the central banks are printing, and this "credit money" is deflating faster than the FED is trying to inflate the reserves. This inflation is not like the one we saw in the 70's. It is a so-called depressionary inflation, which means that the "real money" supply is growing, while the credit supply is collapsing. This is exactly how Peter explains it, too.

81   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:46am  

wthrfrk80 says

True, but if you buy gold at a peak you'll still lose. Big time. And after 100 years we're all dead.

You'll lose for 20 years or so, but after 20 years, if you keep it, you'll still wind up ahead. Besides, gold is still on the way up, while housing is still on the way down.

82   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 8:47am  

dunnross says

Yes it did, because since 2000 we are living in a deflationary world (exactly like Peter predicted).

You're kidding right? Been to a gas station recently?

Almost everything costs more than it did in 2000, other than stocks...which were ridiculously overvalued in 2000.

83   freak80   2012 Jul 7, 8:48am  

dunnross says

Besides, gold is still on the way up, while housing is still on the way down.

Never make predictions. Especially about the future.

84   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:49am  

wthrfrk80 says

You're kidding right? Been to a gas station recently?

No I am not. Oil was $145 back in 2006. It's only $84, today.

85   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:53am  

wthrfrk80 says

Never make predictions. Especially about the future.

Although this is a prediciton, it's a pretty certain one. Tell me this. If I tell you that the sun will be up tomorrow morning, is that a prediction? Gold has been going up for the last 10 years. The sun has been going up in the morning for the last 6 billion years. Yes, agree that the sun prediction is a little more certain than the gold one, but the gold one is pretty good as well. At least it's much better than the one a house-buyer makes by buying a house right now, because the house buyer is betting against the trend. The gold buyer is betting with the trend, and 99% of the time, the one who is betting with the trend is going to win.

86   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 8:55am  

wthrfrk80 says

Almost everything costs more than it did in 2000, other than stocks...which were ridiculously overvalued in 2000.

You dollar worshipers make me laugh. Forget the dollar. It won't be around much longer. Trade you toilet paper of a dollar for some gold nuggets. Then you won't be claiming that everything is getting too expensive.

87   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 9:04am  

bgamall4 says

The dollar is based on a debt currency and the only banks that are relatively strong are US banks.

That's the biggest myth if I ever heard one. The US banks are all insolvent. Most of them were leveraging their reserves 30x1 when the housing bubble popped. That means they could only take a housing decline of 3% to stay solvent. Now that housing has dropped at least 30%, across the board, if these banks had to show their real books, they would immediately be proclaimed as insolvent, and closed down by the FDIC. Instead, the FED decided to keep them open and continue to perpetuate the big lie of their financial fortitude. However, the FED only capitalized them to the sound of $2T. In reality, they lost closer to $15T, and will continue to lose more, as the housing market continues to tank.

88   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 9:06am  

bgamall4 says

I am not saying I can read the future, but so far you have been very wrong.

I've been wrong. You mean I've been wrong when I sold my house back in 2006, and bought gold for $450/oz?

89   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 9:15am  

bgamall4 says

dunnross says

That's the biggest myth if I ever heard one. The US banks are all insolvent.

There are a couple of reasons they can extend and pretend indefinitely. First, real estate at the bottom is being gobbled up by the 1 percent. Second, they were levered much less than Chinese and European banks. So they are in better shape. Third, they are selling assets. Fourth, they are buying US bonds, and using free money to do so.

Only a massive downturn from here on out in real estate would cause these banks to crumble or need more bailouts. They are the best of a world of crap banks.

Gary Anderson strategicdefaultbooks.com

This makes no sense. Are you saying that people would choose one bankrupt currency against another, rather than choosing something that kept its value for the last 5000 years? If you were given cow sh*t to eat all day, would you rather ask for chicken sh*t or the steak?

90   dunnross   2012 Jul 7, 9:27am  

dunnross says

First, real estate at the bottom is being gobbled up by the 1 percent.

Real estate will start going up, because our economy will be stronger. Our economy will be stronger because people would start spending, again. People will start spending again, because, real estate prices are going to start going up. Wait a minute, did you see a little bit of a Catch-22 in this logic, or is it just me?

91   Honest Abe   2012 Jul 7, 10:04am  

Silver has been used as money as far back as 550 BC. The words silver and money are synonymous in 14 lanugages around the world. Gold too has been used as money for many thousands of years. To think otherwise is simply denial.

Fiat currencies, by comparison have a life span of approximately 45 years. America went off the gold standard in 1973 or 1974. Oops, we're screwed.

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