Monday, December 13, 2010

Jim Rogers bets on farm, shuns Wall Street

NEW YORK: Investor guru Jim Rogers says life on the farm will bring far more riches in coming years than the trenches of Wall Street.

Rogers, a commodities evangelist for more than a decade, has tweaked his pitch, saying the producers of the world whether individuals, companies or countries will become the new growth sector.

In short, Rogers told the Reuters 2011 Investment Outlook Summit in New York, being productive, saving the fruit of your labour and owning hard assets hold the keys to a bright future.

All these people who got MBAs made a mistake. The city of London and Wall Street are not going to be great places to be in the next two or three decades. It's going to be the people who produce real goods, he said

Jim Rogers Bets on China's Renminbi

Global currencies have come into the spotlight this year as struggling economies like the European Union and the U.S. have issued massive stimulus to jump-start growth. The result is that emerging-market currencies have popped as investors turned to the higher-yielding currencies leading to accusations that some countries are artificially depressing their money.
China also has come under significant fire by not letting its local currency, the renminbi, appreciate fast enough in value, meaning its goods are cheaper to buy in other countries which helps its export business. On the flip side, other countries have a harder time breaking into the wallets of the Chinese consumer because of the high import price.
Currency battles ignited even more as the European sovereign debt crisis and contagion fears spread throughout the EU. The euro plunged to levels not seen since the Lehman Brothers crisis and had many investors calling for parity with the dollar. The CurrencyShares Euro Trust(FXE) fund has fallen 8.5% year to date.
The U.S. dollar has been on shaky ground as well. PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bullish(UUP) is up 1% for the year while PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bearish(UDN) has lost 4%.
Although the dollar has gained as the euro suffered, expectations are that the Federal Reserve's $600 bond-buying program will lead to money printing and devaluation.
With sentiment negative on the euro and mixed on the U.S. dollar, I recently sat down with Rogers, a legendary contrarian investor, to see what currencies he would be buying and which ones he would be avoiding.
I want to get your take on what the fate of the euro will be in the next year .
Rogers: Next year? I'm not smart enough to know that; you should watch TheStreet.com ... I'm not very good at short-term trading or market timing. I own the euro; whether I own it another day or another year or another five years I don't know. I don't think it will be around in 10 years so I doubt if I'll own it then but I have to watch to see what happens.
So if you don't think it's going to be there in 10 years, why are you owning it now?
Because last summer everybody got extremely pessimistic and everybody was dumping the euro as fast as they could and in my experience when everybody's on one side of the boat you should go to the other side of the boat and so I stepped in and bought it and it went up.
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If You Want To Make A Fortune, Don`t Get An MBA.

“The power is shifting again from the financial centers to the producers of real goods. The place to be is in commodities, raw materials, natural resources.

Don’t go to Harvard Business School. If you want to make fortunes and come back and donate large sums of money to Balliol you’re not going to do it if you get an MBA.”

Jim Rogers

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Everyday investors wonder if market is rigged

NEW YORK — The Wall Street insider trading investigation may lead everyday investors — already rattled by a stock market meltdown, a one-day "flash crash" and the Madoff scandal — to finally conclude that the game is rigged.

"A large part of trading has to do with trust, and I don't have it," says Mark Swenson, a 43-year-old plumber from New Hampshire who refuses to buy individual stocks.

.."When a stock moves up 10 percent, you don't know why," he added. "We can pretend that everyone has access to the same information, but they don't."

Even before news broke that federal investigators were looking into whether hedge funds traded on inside information, small-time investors were pulling their money out of stocks — despite a remarkable run for the market since the spring of 2009.

Hedge funds are speculative funds which make large bets on market movements and are usually used by wealthy private investors or institutions.

Americans have pulled $60 billion out of U.S. stock funds this year, according to the Investment Company Institute, a trade group. Meanwhile, investors have piled money into Treasurys and bond funds that are considered safer investments. And at the same time, banks like Wells Fargo have reported that money is moving into checking and savings accounts.

To be sure, it's natural for people worried about their jobs or the falling value of their homes to sock cash into more conservative investments. But this has been no garden-variety recession.

It has coincided with turmoil in the stock market that goes back a decade, to the collapse of the Internet bubble and portfolio-draining scandals involving high-flying companies such as Enron and WorldCom.

More recently, investors have lived through the housing bubble, the collapse of Wall Street firms such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers and stomach-churning days when it wasn't clear whether capitalism would survive. On top of that came news that financier Bernard Madoff had bilked investors out of billions.

"Virtually everyone on the Street believes there are significant improprieties, and I think there is an even more important point for the massive number of investors who are not Wall Street players," says former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, once known as the "sheriff of Wall Street" for aggressively prosecuting white-collar crime as state attorney general. "And that is for most of us, you can't beat these guys at their own game."

Some pros on Wall Street say hesitation by small investors is good news. It means that there's plenty of "dry powder" to propel the market higher in the next few months when and if the little guy finally relents and joins in the rally.

The insider-trading probe could test that theory.

The FBI this week searched the offices of three hedge funds, and some of Wall Street's most influential firms, including Janus Capital Group, have been subpoenaed in the probe.

On Wednesday, an employee of a firm that supplied market intelligence to hedge funds was arrested and charged, among other things, with conspiracy to commit securities fraud. It was not yet known whether the man dealt with the funds raided this week.

For Swenson, the allegations of insider trading are unnerving, particularly on top of the "flash crash" in May, when a computerized selling program set off a chain reaction that drove the Dow Jones industrials down nearly 1,000 points in mere minutes.

The sell-off was a reminder to some individual investors that hedge funds and other powerful traders use computer programs to make rapid-fire stock trades, giving them an advantage over the slower smaller investor.

"The hedge funds are resorting to more questionable tactics. It's mind-boggling," says Swenson, who invests largely in exchange-traded funds, which track market indexes and can be traded throughout the day, unlike mutual funds.

Spitzer says the new insider trading probes illustrate how the game is tilted against small investors.

"If you are sitting there in front of a screen, thinking your information is going to be good enough to make smart judgments that will permit you to outperform the hundreds of thousands of people on Wall Street who have access to better information and more timely information than you, you're mistaken," Spitzer says.

It's not the first time small investors have been scared out of stocks.

To combat such an impression, the Securities and Exchange Commission was established in 1934, and "circuit breakers" were instituted after the 1987 crash to stop massive selling. But all of the safeguards don't seem to be helping lately.

"If the stock markets had any reputation for integrity, they lost it in the past year," Geisst says.

Restoring small investors' confidence may depend on whether they see ample evidence that federal regulators are successfully cracking down on bad behavior, says Ross B. Intelisano, a securities fraud attorney with the firm Rich & Intelisano.

The market needs them back. Most of the stock in U.S. companies, both public and private, is held by individuals, not institutions, according to Federal Reserve data.

Small investors may be comforted to know that professional investors don't always fare better, even with the edge they have over the masses.

Numerous studies have shown that mutual funds overseen by professional stock pickers often are outperformed by computer-driven index funds.

The record for hedge funds hasn't been so impressive, either. Since 2008, when the number of those funds hit 10,000, nearly 3,000 have gone out of business, according to Hedge Fund Research in Chicago.

"The edge is hugely exaggerated," says Richard Ferri, founder of the investment advisory firm Portfolio Solutions and an advocate of low-cost index funds. "If the small investor does the right thing, he can do better than 99 percent of anyone else."