Showing posts sorted by relevance for query jim rogers. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query jim rogers. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, December 10, 2010

Jim Rogers' 2011 Forecast for Europe's Sovereign Debt Woes and Inflation in the US

Jim Rogers was a guest on CNBC a couple of days back.  He believes - get this - that inflation is here already, and going to get worse.  "I don't know where you people shop!" he deadpans.

Here's the link to the video interview (runs about 9 minutes).

Joking aside, his expectation that wage inflation would follow commodity inflation was an insight I found interesting.  The host hassled Jim a bit about this - and a riled up Rogers is always entertaining.  Personally I was under the guise that broader inflation was not possible without wage inflation - according to Rogers, the causality is actually reversed.
“Everybody watching this show knows that prices are going up,” Rogers said. “Prices are going up, that’s called inflation and ultimately wages are going up too… anyway that’s not good for stock markets.”
Jim also believes many Western European nations are bankrupt, and need to restructure their debt.
“You need to let Ireland go bankrupt. They are bankrupt, why should innocent Germans, Poles or anybody pay for mistakes made by Irish politicians,” Rogers said.

Greece is also insolvent, Portugal has a liquidity problem and countries like Belgium, France and even the UK have various problems, he added.
Source: CNBC

Hat tip to The Daily Crux for the original link.


More Jim Rogers:

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Jim Rogers Believes World is Heading for Depression

Here's an informative, in-depth interview with Jim Rogers recorded in the last month - running time ~28 minutes.  

Rogers reiterates his disgust with the recent government economic interventions, especially in London and Washington DC.  He believes we are making the same mistakes that were made in the 1930s, which led to the Great Depression, and in Japan in the 1990s, which led to Japan's "lost decade" of economic growth.

Some quick hits:
  • Rogers is bearish on the UK economy and the Pound Sterling, as he doesn't see what can fill the economic holes of the depletion of oil in the North Sea and London's imploding finance industry
  • Countries are starting to question whether they should lend money to the UK, US already
  • Capitalism and free markets did not fail - they weren't allowed to work by Central Banks, which wouldn't let people fail (starting with the bailout of Long Term Capital Management)
  • Farming will be one of the best industries in the world for the next decade or two
  • Debasing your own currency has never led to prosperity
  • We're seeing a gradual shift away from the US Dollar as the world's reserve currency, just as there was a slow move away from the Pound Sterling 50-80 years ago
  • Printing money has never, ever worked



Further Jim Rogers reading:
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Monday, May 04, 2009

Jim Rogers: IMF Sales May Drive Gold Below $700

Jim Rogers says that IMF sales of gold could drive the price of the barbarous relic below $700/ounce.

Rogers told Bloomberg: ”The fact is that IMF is trying to get permission from everybody to sell gold. I don’t know it will succeed or not. But if and when IMF sells its gold, gold prices may go to a bottom. Who knows? It may go down to US$700. IMF has got a lot of gold to sell. If it does, I hope I’m brave enough and smart enough to buy more."

He added that he does not intend to sell any gold at this time.


More recent Jim Rogers coverage:

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Jim Rogers: The US is About to Have a Currency Crisis

If you have the majority of your savings in US dollars, this may be the most important insight you ever hear from Jim Rogers.


“We’re going to have a currency crisis, probably this fall or the fall of 2010.  It’s been building up for a long time. We’ve had a huge rally in the dollar, an artificial rally in the dollar, so it’s time for a currency crisis.”

Jim reiterated that the place to be invested is in commodities, particularly agriculture:

"You're going to have serious food shortages in the next 3-5 years - prices are going to go through the roof."

You can view a video of this entire interview using this link (click on the "Video" tab on top).

Want some ideas about agricultural commodities with particularly appealing fundamentals right now?  Check out This Week in Commodities, which is heavily focused on agricultural commodities - right now we're invested in sugar and orange juice, both profitable trades to date and still climbing.

More recent insights from Jim Rogers:

Ed. Note: I just got done reading Jim Rogers' new book - review to follow. Long story short, it's an insightful, quick read that I'd highly recommend. Pick up a copy if you haven't already:


Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Jim Rogers Interviewed by GoldSeek Radio

Legendary investor Jim Rogers was interviewed by Chris Waltzek of GoldSeek Radio a few days ago.  Here's a link to the audio interview, and it's also available on iTunes.

Jim begins on hour #2.

My notes from items that caught my ear:
  • The producers of "real goods" are going to rule the world for the next couple of decades (farmers, etc)
  • Has sold all of his emerging markets except for China
  • If the world gets better, commodities will be the leaders - and if it doesn't, hard assets are still the place to be, because governments are printing money
  • Still waiting to short the long-term US bond - it's the "last bubble" he sees
  • Predicts double-digit interest rates in the future for US
More recent Jim Rogers coverage:

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Live From Singapore: An Exclusive Interview with Jim Rogers (Commodities, China, Inflation, and More!)

I’m thrilled to report that while in Singapore last week, I had the great honor of interviewing Jim Rogers in person.  He was extremely kind in hosting me and entertaining my questions, and I’m excited to be able to share our fun 45-minute chat with you here.

As you may know, I’m a longtime reader and fan of Jim Rogers - and one of my constant frustrations with mainstream financial outlets is that, while they frequently interview Rogers, they lob too many idiotic questions his way, like “What should the Fed do?”

So I hope that you find our discussion around his current world and financial outlook insightful, especially if you’ve been following his work as closely as I have.

All of his books are excellent, as you probably know - three in particular had quite profound effects on my thinking about investing, the world, and life in general.  If you haven’t yet read all of these, I’d highly recommend you pick up a copy of his investing classics:
And now, on to our interview...

Still a Bull on China, and the Renminbi Too

Jim Rogers was a bull on China decades before it became fashionable, and he’s still wildly optimistic about China’s future.

“I believe China’s going to become the next great nation in the world,” he says.

“People call the Chinese ‘communist’...California and Massachusettes are more communist than China,” he remarked with a grin.

“The Chinese communist party is very smart - as are the leaders here in Singapore.  There is a thorough application process to apply to run for office - all applicants are well vetted.”  He says it’s quite rigorous, like “applying to Princeton” and added that “a guy like Obama would never have been able to run here (Singapore).”

Rogers has driven across China three times, and has seen much of the country’s evolution from the ground.  He’s been enthusiastic about China for some time now - at least since his Adventure Capitalist trip (cerca 2000).  Anyone who’s invested alongside his long-time bullish views on China has seen very handsome returns.

He says that according to local legend, Singapore was a role model for China’s development.  Singapore has evolved very rapidly over the past four decades, from a Southeast Asia backwater in the 1960’s, into one of the most prosperous countries in the world today.

“The rumor is that Deng Xioping visited here (Singapore) in 1978 - when he saw what was going on, he returned to China, and started to open the country up,” Rogers told me.  “In fact, if you ask some people here, they’ll say the Chinese are still keeping a close eye on what’s going on here.”

An interesting side play he likes for the years and decades ahead is Chinese tourism.

“The Chinese have not been able to travel for the last 300 years.  Now they can - and they are going to flood the world with tourism for years to come,” he says.

Chinese tourists should have a lot of purchasing power from a strong currency, if Rogers is right.  He cites the Chinese renminbi as one of his favorite picks right now, and believes it’s about as close to a sure thing as you can get.

“Here in Singapore, they've allowed their currency rise to mitigate inflation.  I expect the Chinese will eventually have to do the same thing.”

“You’re better off cutting growth in advance, than allowing inflation to get out of control.  If growth drops to 3%, who cares?  That’s better than letting inflation get out of control, because once it does, it’s very tough to reign in.”

"Then you have to incur a recession or worse to control inflation."

I asked if inflation is really running around 5% as reported in China and surrounding Asia.

“Who knows - but at least they admit they have inflation!  They’re not trying to deny its existence like the US,” he quipped.

He blames the United States, and Japan to a lesser extent, for “printing money like crazy and exporting inflation to the rest of the world.”

Commodities Should Remain Hot

“Most of my portfolio is in commodities, and currencies,” he shared.  “I expect to make money in commodities because, if demand continues to rise, that is bullish for commodities.”

But what if we see a repeat of the financial collapse of 2008?

“If demand collapses, I anticipate the central banks of the world will print more money, and that will then cause commodities to rise,” he counters.

Agriculture is still his favorite, thanks to supply constraints that are nowhere close to being solved - including a lack of farmers.

“The average farmer in the United States is 57 years old,” Rogers shared (providing me with yet another “How the heck did he know that offhand?” moment).

“Who’s going to farm the land 10 years from now?  These guys will be 67...if they’re still around.  And nobody is graduating with farming degrees today.”

“There are just not enough farmers in the world.  There are vast stretches of empty land in Japan, believe it or not - with nobody to farm them.”

He thinks this commodity bull market could continue to rock and roll for some time because “little or no supply has come on line yet.”  He points out that the commodity sector was starting to attract attention pre-2008, as its bull run began around 1999, but the 2008 financial crisis knocked a lot of potential new supply offline.  Which of course sets the stage for further price increases.

Bearish on the US and UK - Crisis Soon?

“The US has peaked in relative power, if not absolute power as well,” Rogers says.  He believes the US is now on a post-empire downward trajectory of sorts, analogous to the UK last century.

“Around 1918, the UK went into decline.  By the mid 1970’s, it was bankrupt.”

“Starting in 1979, it experienced a bounceback rally of sorts - thanks to their oil fields in the North Sea.  Most people give Maggie Thatcher credit for their comeback, but the real white knight for the UK was the North Sea oil discovery,” he said.

“You give me the largest oil field in the world, and I’ll show you a good time too,” Rogers remarked with a grin.

“But the US would need 4 or 5 North Sea oil fields to save the current situation,” he says.

Why so many?

“Because the Federal debt is unpayable.”  The financial profligacy of the United States disturbs Rogers quite a bit - he believes we’ve reached a point of no return, and thinks another crisis could start as early as this fall.

“Foreigners are already starting to get cold feet about investing in the US,” he said, citing the fact that some Swiss banks are no longer buying any US shares.

I asked if he thought the current system of government in the US was ultimately salvageable - he paused for a bit to think, and said with some level of remorse: “I don’t think so, unfortunately.  Not without some level of serious system shock or failure.”

“Plato wrote that the natural progression of government is from dictatorship, to oligarchy, to democracy, to chaos.  So we may be on the track from democracy to chaos in the US.  We’d need a serious shock to shake people up.”

Does the End of QE2 Really Matter?

With QE2 now officially set to end, I asked if it mattered.

“No, it doesn’t really matter.  They’ll continue to print money.  Maybe they’ll call it QE3, or Cupcake, or something else" - but he's thinks they'll continue to print.

With next year being an election year, he expects that the powers that be in the US will do whatever it takes to keep the economy looking good.  “Nobody wants to be held responsible for an economic mess,” he told me , expecting that the US government will continue to paper over their problems, and perhaps even accelerate their efforts to do so.

Actions to Consider - Investing and Personal

And with this upbeat outlook for Americans and other Westerners, what personal actions should we take to protect our portfolios - not to mention our savings, and most importantly, our personal freedom?

As discussed, commodities are still Rogers’ favorite place to be - especially agriculture and energy, because the supply bottlenecks that were in place at the start of this commodity bull market have barely begun to be addressed.  And it can take 5-10 years or more for supply to come online, he pointed out, citing again the 10-year delay between the North Sea oil discovery and its becoming a productive oil field.

Fforeign currencies are his preferable hedge against further anticipated US dollar weakness - with his favorite being the Chinese renminbi.

But what if things get really sticky in the US?  I asked him his thoughts on protecting assets from potential “patriotic” confiscation by the US government (if Uncle Sam, say, decides he needs a little help in paying off his debts).

“Foreign exchange controls are coming to the US.  The UK had exchange controls by 1939, and they remained in place until Thatcher repealed them,” he said.

“They never work.  But politicians always resort to them.”

“So, while it’s still legal, and ethical, to do so, I would recommend diversifying your money outside of the US.”

(I took this as a personal homework assignment, as later that day I walked into a Singapore bank , with only my US passport in hand, and asked if I could open up an account.  No dice, they said - I’d need to show a work permit.  But I did manage to stir up things with the bank teller a bit - you could tell she was not anxious to open up a foreign bank account for an American.)

“To my knowledge, no country to date has expropriated money from overseas that was already there before exchange controls were instituted - but the US is always an exception,” Rogers remarked regarding the safety of money outside of US soil.

Having recently read Barton Biggs’ Wealth, War and Wisdom - an excellent study of wealth preservation during World War II - I asked whether a business would be harder to confiscate than, say, a lump of cash sitting in a foreign bank account.

“Of course,” Rogers agreed.  “It’d be harder to expropriate an overseas farm, for example.”

So where to from here?

“I don’t know what to tell you,” Rogers advised me, “except to move to Asia, and teach your children Mandarin.”

“Teach them to farm, too.”

He has certainly followed his own advice - he now lives in Singapore with his wife and two daughters.  And his girls, ages 3 and 7, are incredibly cute blond girls who amuse and floor the locals (Singapore is 70% Chinese) with their fluent Mandarin.

But what about my wife’s job at Intel in California?

“Your wife should leave Intel...and take up farming,” he said with a grin.

Jim Rogers latest book is A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing.  If you haven't yet read it, go pick up a copy now!

Big thanks to Jim for hosting me and speaking with me.  It was a real thrill to speak with him in person, and I'm really glad we got to dive into these discussion topics in depth.

People I shared this story with asked me what he's like in person - he's a GREAT guy, super cool.  Very easy to see why he's so universally loved and admired around the world,

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Jim Rogers Interview - His Latest Thoughts on Commodities, Treasuries, and the Economy

Our friends at Hard Assets Investor just conducted an interview with our commodities hero, Jim Rogers.

Some quick hits from the interview:
  • He's still long sugar - but wouldn't buy more right now
  • Rogers is still bullish on oil over the next decade
  • He continues to like China
  • Not short Treasuries yet, but hopes to short them in the next year or two
Again here's the full interview transcript - a short two-pager, over at Hard Assets Investor.

More recent commentary from Jim Rogers:

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Jim Rogers is Buying...US Dollars???

On Sunday, I mused that one of my deepest concerns about being bullish on the US Dollar is that I'm on the opposite side of the trade from Jim Rogers, who thinks the buck is doomed.

Not so, pointed out astute reader Sibbie via email, citing a recent Rogers interview in BusinessWeek:

Q: How much of the runup is being driven by U.S. deficits and the weakening dollar?

Jim Rogers: A huge amount is about not just U.S. deficits, but all deficits. Deficits are going berserk nearly everywhere. Throughout history, printing money has led to weaker currencies and higher prices for real assets. And there are many, many pessimists about the dollar, including me. So many pessimists that I suspect there's a rally coming. I have no idea why there should be, but things do usually rally when you have this many bears at the same time. I've actually accumulated a few more dollars. I mean, it's not a significant position, but I do own more dollars than I did a month ago. And we'll probably also have a gold correction because there's so many bulls on gold.

Nice find, Sibbie, thank you!

You can read the rest of Jim Rogers' interview with Maria "Money Honey 1.0" Bartiromo here.

Just to clarify my position - I also believe we're heading for higher inflation...just a little later than many pundits think, because we have some massive deflationary forces to work through in the short term. Here's my take on inflation/deflation in the near term.

Related reading: Jim Rogers' latest thoughts on Commodities, Treasuries, and the Economy

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Expert Commodity Picks for 2009: Jim Rogers and Marc Faber

What a crappy year 2008 was for commodities! Will they rebound in 2009? If you believe, as I do, that we are in the middle of a secular bull market for commodities, then current prices represent a tremendous buying opportunity.

Jim Rogers has been saying it best lately - that you want to buy assets where the fundamentals are unimpaired. And the only asset class where the fundamentals are currently unimpaired is commodities - in fact, the fundamental story for many commodities has even improved since the financial crisis took hold, as there is a lot of supply coming off the market.

Jim is also fond of referencing the performance of commodities during the Great Depression, where they were the first asset class to turn up because there was no supply.

Since I agree with Jim's point of view, I decided to research specific commodity picks experts are making for 2009. My "expert" criteria is highly biased, based on the two people I've been following the closest during this commodity bull run - Jim Rogers and Marc Faber - because of their prescient calls and knack for spotting commodity trends before the herd.


Jim Rogers

Marc Faber
  • Says 2009 will be a "total disaster" for the global economy.
  • Believes commodities have corrected within a bull market, and there are opportunities to be found there.
  • Sees significant inflation coming as a result of the Fed's actions.
  • He continues to like gold and gold miners - believes exploration companies are very depressed with respect to the price of physical gold.
  • Oil at this level is becoming attractive, as are oil companies.
  • Shares his specific picks at the 7:45 mark of this interview.

Editor's Note: This article was also published by Seeking Alpha.


Click on their respective names to read more Jim Rogers and Marc Faber coverage.

For more information on investing in gold miners, check out some of our recent coverage of gold and gold stocks. I personally subscribe to BIG GOLD, produced by Casey Research, which is an excellent service.





Sunday, April 26, 2009

Jim Rogers in BusinessWeek - April 14, 2009

Our favorite investor, Jim Rogers, was recently interviewed by BusinessWeek magazine - he's been in the media quite a bit recently, plugging his new book A Gift to My Children: A Father's Lessons for Life and Investing, which is scheduled to be released this Tuesday, April 28.

Here are a few of my favorite excerpts below - and you can read the whole piece on BusinessWeek.com.

On diversification:

"Diversification is something that stock brokers came up with to protect themselves, so they wouldn't get sued [for making bad investment choices for clients]. Henry Ford never diversified, Bill Gates didn't diversify. The way to get rich is to put your eggs in one basket, but watch that basket very carefully. And make sure you have the right basket."

On commodities:

"If the world economy is going to revive, commodities are going to lead it back up. If the world economy is not going to revive, commodities are still the place to be—especially with governments printing so much money. Look at the 1970s. The world economy was in the tank, but commodities did very well. We have supply constraints. Oil production is declining."

"The prices historically are still very depressed, compared with most other commodities. I bought all commodities recently, but I probably bought more agriculture than anything else."


More recent coverage of Jim Rogers:
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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Jim Rogers Prefers Oil Over Gold Right Now

Jim Rogers told Bloomberg News earlier this week that he prefers oil over gold right now, because of the potential supply overhang of the IMF threat to sell it's gold.

“The IMF is trying to sell its gold,” Rogers, chairman of Singapore-based Rogers Holdings, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “The IMF is one of the largest holders of gold so you’ve got this huge supply overhang.”

Further reading - more recent Jim Rogers coverage:

Monday, July 27, 2009

Jim Rogers: I Would Not Be Buying Chinese Shares Right Now

Legendary investor and China bull Jim Rogers told Bloomberg that he hasn't bought any new Chinese stocks since November. He said they've risen too far, too fast, and that they will "probably collapse" at some point. Then, he'll buy more.



Rogers is investing in commodities in lieu of equities as a way to play the China story.


Here's a video of his interview on Bloomberg (click the Video tab to view)


Great comments from Jim, as always - he's fired up!


More recent insights from Rogers:


Sunday, November 23, 2008

Jim Rogers Video on FT.com - November 17, 2008

Here's a recent interview of Jim Rogers on FT.com (Financial Times) on November 17, 2008. It's a four-part interview, with a total running time of about 16-17 minutes.

Below are my notes from the interview.

Part 1 - Global recession will be long and deep.
  • He has not yet exited his US dollar positions, as he believes the current rally is an artificial one driven by short covering.
  • It could go longer and higher than anyone expects.
  • Reiterated his opinion that the US dollar is a flawed and maybe doomed currency.
  • We're going to have the worst recession since World War II
  • Likely we'll see exchange controls at some point in the US
Part 2 - Market correction is good for commodities.
  • The way to make money now is to buy the things where the fundamentals have been unimpaired.
  • Not only are the fundamentals of commodities unimpaired, but they have been strengthened, as supply is going to take a serious hit across the board as a result of tight credit markets.
  • "Farmers can't get loans for fertilizer now."
  • In the 30's, commodities hit bottom first because there was no supply. The same thing happened in the 1970's - again because there was no supply.
Part 3 - China economic story still intact.
  • "Selling China in 2008 would be like selling America in 1908. You might have looked good in the short term...but who cares?"
  • He bought more Chinese shares in Oct/Nov of this year.
  • Also believes the fundamentals of China will come out of this recession unimpaired.
Part 4 - Inflation is coming - you'd better own real assets.
  • We're following the mistakes of Japan by bailing everyone out.
  • This is the first time in world history that every government in the world is printing money.
  • It will lead to much, much higher prices.
  • Don't sell your gold, cotton, or sugar, because prices will be much, much higher in a few years.
  • We are not experiencing deflation - this is forced liquidation. We're fighting the wrong battle by fighting deflation.
Editors note: Click here to read more recent coverage of Jim Rogers.

Want to be alerted about Jim Rogers coverage as it happens? Send an email to "Brett(at)CommodityBullMarket.com" and put "Rogers updates" in the subject line - we'll add you to our email alert list.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Jim Rogers Waiting to Short Treasuries...Again

It looks like Jim Rogers, like us, is still waiting for another appropriate opportunity to short US Treasury bonds.  From Bloomberg:

Investor Jim Rogers said the Federal Reserve will probably start buying Treasuries to keep borrowing costs down, postponing a rout in U.S. government debt.

“He’s setting things up for a gigantic fall down the line, but that does not mean he can’t drive long-term interest rates to zero,” Rogers said. “Governments are printing money everywhere, borrowing stupendous amounts. Throughout history that has led to problems in the bond markets, and it will this time too.”

Rogers said he unwound in the fourth quarter so-called short positions that would benefit from declines in Treasuries. He “made a loss” betting notes would decline, he said.

“I am waiting to short them again,” Rogers said. “I have no idea when. U.S. government bonds are going to be one of the great shorts of our time somewhere down the road.”

Monday, May 17, 2010

Jim Rogers' Latest Outlook on the Euro and European Bailouts

Jim Rogers was interviewed on GoldSeek Radio over the weekend.  You can catch the full interview here - it starts around the 1 hour 20 minute mark.

Jim is not thrilled with the European bailout - as you'd expect.  He's not as bearish on the Euro in the near term as other pundits are, as he believes that sentiment against the Euro is at an extreme right now.

And Rogers still loves commodities, since the European bailout implies that fiat currency will continue to be debased.  He says "if he were looking at precious metals, he'd look at silver."

In case you missed Jim Rogers' recent interview on CNBC's Squawk Box, you can check that out here.


And Rogers fans may also enjoy this Marc Faber interview about why he believes China is set to crash.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Jim Rogers' Two Favorite Commodities to Buy Right Now

Jim Rogers may like gold - but he LOVES silver.
“I would rather own silver than gold," Rogers tells India's ET Now

“Silver is still 40 percent below its all-time high. So silver has not been any sort of great bubble compared to perhaps some other assets we know." (Source: Moneynews.com)
And Jim, an agricultural bull since he opened his commodity fund in 1998, picks rice as his favorite grain:
“Likewise for the rice, if rice goes down, I will buy more rice. So both the silver and rice have a great future for the next few years,” Rogers says.
Incidentally there was an article in today's Wall Street Journal that reported farmers are reducing acreage for rice by as much as 30%, in favor of higher priced cotton and soybeans:
A shift in planting likely will come in the spring when farmers sow their fields in Arkansas and Louisiana, analysts said. They are projecting as much as a 30% cut in acreage devoted to long-grain rice. Growers will turn to soybeans, cotton or other crops after becoming frustrated with rice prices, which have lagged behind other agricultural commodities.

In 2010, U.S. rice futures fell nearly 4%, in contrast to soybean futures that climbed 34% and cotton futures that rose 91%. Driving the price gains were concerns that production wouldn't keep pace with demand, particularly as China's appetite for imports surged.
With corn, soybeans, cotton, and rice often competing for the same land, the sharp speculator can often do quite well buying the laggard(s) - which, in this case, is rice.

Precisely because farmers usually neglect the crop with the lagging price, and instead plant the crops that have already rallied.  Which reduces the supply of said grain.
rough rice 5 year price chart
Rough rice is still well off its 2008 highs - with potential acreage reductions on tap, we could see a breakout soon. (Source: Barchart.com)
This is exactly the reason we we'd been salivating over the potential for cotton for so long - it was a matter of when prices would rocket, not if.  And rocket they did!
cotton price chart outlook 2011
When cotton broke out - largely thanks to supply constraints - it really did a moonshot!

The playbook was analogous with King Cotton - soybeans and corn had been rallying for years, while cotton's price languished.  So farmers who had traditionally planted cotton increasingly got eyes for the sexier returns its ag cousins could bring instead.  Supply fell - and soon after, prices rocketed.

So if you're looking to invest like Jim Rogers - and get some exposure to the grains - it looks like rice is the most reasonably priced starch for your plate today.

Hat tip Daily Crux for the original link.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Jim Rogers on Bloomberg: November 3, 2008

Editors Note: Click here to read other recent posts about Jim Rogers, including some recent videos.

I don't know about you, but I've got a case of the election blues. And not because my guy didn't win - I didn't even have a horse in this race, I couldn't bring myself to vote for any of these turkeys.

So to cheer up, I've dug out the latest Jim Rogers video. Now here's a guy I KNOW is angrier than I am right now - with free market economics going the way of the Dodo Bird, Tyrannosaurus Rex, and the capital gains tax cut (ugh).

Jim Rogers' latest thoughts (and some great one-liners):
  • Bailouts are going to lead to inflation, higher interest rates, and a declining dollar
  • The US is making the same mistakes Japan has made, by not letting bad banks fail
  • My favorite line: "Ben Bernanke is not even as smart as Greenpan, and he was not smart at all"
  • My 3rd favorite: "You can have 10-15 years of bad economics, or you can have 1-2 of bad economics"
  • My 2nd favorite: "All (Paulson) has to do is resign and close the Federal Reserve, and the crisis takes care of itself"
  • Another gem: "That's why they're in politics - because they don't know anything"
  • The only way to make money is to buy the things where the fundamentals are unimpaired - and the only thing that fits that bill is...drumroll...wait for it...wait for it...commodities!
  • He owns gold, but the IMF is about to sell a lot of gold - so it could go to $600. If it does, he'll buy a lot. If it goes to $900, he'll buy a lot.
  • He's buying agriculture, oil, and shorting government bonds "today"
  • Sugar's going to go through the roof over the next two decades - and he breaks out a packet on air!

  • Part I:


Part II:

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Trader Vic: The Best Trading Book You've Never Heard Of

A few months back a friend mentioned an obscure trading book to me, citing it as one of the best trading books he's ever read, despite the fact that very few people have ever heard of it. Since this guy is a top notch trader in his own right, I made a mental note to add this book to my reading list.

This weekend I read Trader Vic: Methods of a Wall Street Master cover to cover, and have to agree it's a fantastic read - one that I think our regular readers will definitely enjoy. It's authored by legendary trader Victor Sperandeo, who tells all for 260 pages. Think of the insight contained in each interview in Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders, but in even more detail.

Sperandeo categorizes market participants into three basic types:
  1. Traders, who focus their activity on the intraday and/or short term trend
  2. Speculators, who focus on the intermediate trend, taking market positions and holding them for weeks to months
  3. Investors, who deal mainly with the long term trend, and hold their positions from months to years
He identifies himself as primarily a speculator, but one who plays all three trends, which he jokes might make him a "speculative trader who also invests."

What I found so great about this book is that Vic does not hold up any one theory or technique as holding the secret to investment success. On the contrary, he cites this as the flaw of most investment books - so, he set out to write one that would combine technical and fundamental analysis, with a healthy sprinkling of probabilities and risk management.

The key takeaway is that investing/trading is a game of probabilities. Your goal, as a market participant, is to maximize your probability of success on each trade, while simultaneously optimizing your risk/reward on that trade.

For much of the book, Sperandeo shares, chapter by chapter, the considerations he uses when placing his positions. He holds Dow Theory in very high regards, using it as a strong guide (but never an absolute indicator). He also uses basic technical analysis, saying its greatest value is that it "provides a method of measuring the tendency of the market to react in a particular way under similar conditions throughout history."

He does not rely on complex technical analysis though, and instead pokes fun at the die hard practitioners. Fellow fans of Elliott Wave Analysis may be a little disappointed that Vic does not regard it as particularly useful.

However Vic has no shortage of additional insights to share that compliment his use of basic technical analysis. He discusses how he identifies a change of trend, which he believes is "the fastest and most risk-free way to make money in the markets." He shows you how to draw and trendline and make use of moving averages and oscillators - again for framing your trading decisions, and not as an absolute guarantee of success.

As most astute traders seem to be, Sperandeo has deep rooted libertarian views. He is not a fan of Keynesian Economics (to put it lightly), and properly lambastes this school of thought for the fraud that it is...ending by basically saying that this is all going to end very badly.

Last but certainly not least, the second portion of the book is dedicated to helping you get your mental and emotional house in order. Vic says that out of 38 people he trained in the 1980s, only 5 made money and went on to pursue their own careers as traders?

Why such a low success rate? He cites the difference between success and failure in trading as "neither intelligence or knowledge to trade, but the will to execute knowledge."

In other words, the unsuccessful traders were not so because they lacked knowledge - it was because they couldn't keep their heads about them and stay disciplined in the heat of the moment!

This discussion of personal discipline and beliefs is very valuable, and similar in flavor as what Van Tharp advises and schools traders on.

In summary, whether you are primarily a trader, specular, or investor, Trader Vic: Methods of a Wall Street Master is a fun and enlightening read. I'd highly recommend you add it to your reading list.


What Does Trader Vic See Ahead for 2010?

The one thought that kept floating through my head while reading Trader Vic was: "Man, I'd love to hear what this guy is thinking today!"

Well, as luck would have it, our friends over at Hard Assets Investor just caught up with Trader Vic last week!

Lara Crigger, associate editor, HardAssetsInvestor.com (Crigger): Which commodities do you think are going to do well next year?

Victor Sperandeo, "Trader Vic" (Sperandeo): Well, I'm on record across the world as saying that gold is the best investment in the world for the next two to three years. It's fundamentally obvious, but when you're printing huge amounts of paper vs. something that is considered money, the paper will depreciate and the hard assets will go up. So gold and silver will do well—silver a little less so—but gold certainly.

Even when it was about $830-$850/oz, I basically said, "I don't see any scenario where it can come down." But I wouldn't say that it can't correct at any given moment. When the Fed decides to raise interest rates, at that point, gold will sell off. It will be a steep correction.

But it's also a buying opportunity, because if they raise rates, it would only be to try to stabilize the dollar. But it wouldn't affect the kinds of huge deficits and the printing of money that's going on for the next 10 years. It's unsustainable. So gold, that's my most favorite, if you will.



The Latest At-Home Party Craze: Gold Selling

So is the gold market getting overheated, or not? The opinions on both sides sure are polarized.

Some, like our pal Trader Vic, insist this isn't a gold bubble. I was listening to the Financial Sense Newshour yesterday, and they agreed, saying we're not even close to the mania stage yet.

On the other hand, our local rag, the Sacramento Bee, reports that "the latest at-home party craze is gold selling."

Move over, Tupperware, candles and kitchenware.

The latest at-home party craze is gold selling.

Whether spurred by cash-strapped consumers or the alluring jump in gold prices, the concept is enticingly simple: Bring your tangled chains, broken bracelets, outdated earrings or a hoop that's lost its mate. Even dental fillings or an ex-boyfriend's heart-shaped pendant. Your stash of unwanted gold is tested, weighed and traded on the spot. For cash.

And with gold briefly sweeping past the $1,200-an-ounce mark in recent weeks, it's becoming an even more tantalizing invitation. Here and across the country, it seems, old gold is turning into green.


If not a bubble, then we're at least overdue for the current correction, which we're about $100 into so far. And surprise, surprise - look at the gold bull that predicted this correction a few weeks back...our hero, Jim Rogers...


Correction: We're Not Trading Against Jim Rogers After All

On Sunday, I mused that one of my deepest concerns about being bullish on the US Dollar is that I'm on the opposite side of the trade from Jim Rogers, who thinks the buck is doomed.

Not so, pointed out astute reader Sibbie via email, citing a recent Rogers interview in BusinessWeek:

Q: How much of the runup is being driven by U.S. deficits and the weakening dollar?

Jim Rogers: A huge amount is about not just U.S. deficits, but all deficits. Deficits are going berserk nearly everywhere. Throughout history, printing money has led to weaker currencies and higher prices for real assets. And there are many, many pessimists about the dollar, including me. So many pessimists that I suspect there's a rally coming. I have no idea why there should be, but things do usually rally when you have this many bears at the same time. I've actually accumulated a few more dollars. I mean, it's not a significant position, but I do own more dollars than I did a month ago. And we'll probably also have a gold correction because there's so many bulls on gold.

Nice find, Sibbie, thank you!

You can read the rest of Jim Rogers' interview with Maria "Money Honey 1.0" Bartiromo here.


Positions Update - Still Really Short the S&P, Had to Roll the Dollar Contract

On Friday I had to roll my dollar contract, and then realized I didn't have enough margin to buy back in...oops! So I'm still holding the S&P shorts and puts, and am waiting for a re-entry point on the long dollar side.

We had a nice week of gains on the dollar, and we may be due for a short-term pullback, so I'll wait patiently, and hope for the S&P breakdown that we've been waiting for.

What's reassuring is that nobody seems to be a believer that this is the start of a dollar rally. That's just the way we like it.


A strong week for the dollar - looks like the bottom may finally be in place.
(Source: Barchart.com)


The S&P continues to defy gravity - but its time may be limited, if the dollar has indeed put a bottom in.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Open positions:



Thanks for reading!

Current Account Value: $18,304.68

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $38,304.68
2009 Returns: Ugh, too depressing to calculate right now...

Prior yearly returns:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial trading stake: $2,000

Sunday, December 06, 2009

Gold CAN Still Go Down; Trading Against Jim Rogers and Richard Russell; Worst Case Scenarios Already "Priced In"

So Gold CAN Still Go Down, After All

Last week was shaping up to be another banner one for gold, as the old relic kept on climbing, day after day...that is, until it stopped.

Gold's one-way rise experienced a sharp setback on Friday, dropping nearly $50 on the day, and over $60 in intraday measures.

Friday was the biggest down day for gold in some time.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Perhaps related, perhaps not, The Financial Times reported on Wednesday that China is wary of the danger of a gold "bubble" (hat tip to my good friend and regular reader Super Joe for sending this link along).

Hu Xiaolian, the vice-governor of the central bank, said Beijing would not buy gold indiscriminately.

“We must keep in mind the long-term effects when considering what to use as our reserves,” she said. “We must watch out for bubbles forming on certain assets and be careful in those areas.”

China announced this year that it had quietly doubled its gold reserves to 1,054 tonnes, the world’s fifth largest holding. India has also joined the rush, gobbling up half the IMF’s gold sale.

China's ever-increasing interest has spawned the popular gold bull theory that the Chinese have established a "$1,000 floor" price for the metal. In other words, with the Chinese buying up more gold on the dips, one needn't worry about the possibility of gold ever dipping down to triple-digit territory ever again.

The only problem with theories like this is that, however sound they may appear, they are usually wrong. The market takes great delight in squashing "absolute" myths and theories, and I suspect this one will be no different.

But - you may interject - with the government printing money like it's going out of style, won't that result in rising price inflation, and rising gold prices? It sure may - I just suspect that it will take longer than most investors anticipate, thanks to the massive amounts of credit that will be written off in the coming years, resulting in some wicked near-term debt deflation.


Trading Against Our Hero, Jim Rogers

Anytime you find yourself on the other side of the trade from Jim Rogers, you probably want to seriously reconsider your position.

That's where we find ourselves now, though, with Rogers continuing to reiterate his distaste for the dollar. To be honest, I don't like the dollar fundamentally either, but believe that paradoxically, it's due to rise in the near term because of its inherent flaws.

In other words, I agree with everything Rogers says, except for his timing. We'll see who's right - I wouldn't blame you one bit for siding with Rogers - but I'm sticking to my guns on this one...at least for now.


And...Richard Russell, While We're At It

The Great Richard Russell believes that gold is going to move higher, no matter what happens, according to The Daily Crux.

Question -- What would it mean if Industrials and Transports broke out to joint new highs?

Answer -- I think it would mean that the Bernanke Fed was beginning to win the war against deflation, and assets were once more beginning to inflate. In that case, gold should move higher.

Question -- What would it mean if this advance topped out, and the bear market was taking over again?

Answer -- I think it would mean that the Fed had lost its battle against inflation. If that was the case, I believe the Fed would spend even more, there would be even more stimulus programs and interest rates would remain at zero "for the duration." In that case, gold should move higher.


(Source: The Daily Crux)

Well I hate to trade against Russell too - a true legend. But, the dollar bull/gold bear camp is so deserted, that I guess it just comes with the territory that our favorite investors will be on the other side of the trade...because there are so few on our side!


Why Worst Case Scenarios are Already "Priced Into" These Markets

Tom Dyson, one of my favorite investment writers/analysts, is also one of the very few lone soles left in the debt deflation / dollar bull camp (last one out, please turn out the lights!)

Last week, Tom penned an article that I thought articulated the case for a near term dollar rally brilliantly - and our good friends at Stansberry & Associates were kind enough to allow us to reprint the piece in it's entirety here.


Positions Update - Still Really Short the S&P, Long the Dollar

Nothing's changed here - still waiting for the dollar to bottom, and the S&P to top. It's been a maddening wait.

We think the dollar is the lynchpin to the whole equation, and that a dollar bottoming should roughly coincide with a top in the other markets. Friday was an encouraging sign, as the dollar rallied sharply. Has it finally put in a low? We shall see!

The dollar rallied sharply on Friday to end the week - did this mark the start of a mega-rally?
(Source: Barchart.com)

Though this rally appears to be running on fumes, it's still running...at least for now.
(Source: Barchart.com)

Open positions:


Thanks for reading!

Current Account Value: $17,217.50

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $37,217.50
2009 Returns: Ugh, too depressing to calculate right now...

Prior yearly returns:
2008: -8%
2007: 175%
2006: 60%
2005: 805%

Initial trading stake: $2,000

Monday, August 10, 2009

Sugar Prices Hit 28-Year High - How's Jim Rogers Playing It?

The severe supply/demand imbalance in sugar fundamentals has propelled sugar prices to a 28-year high. The big driver of the rally has been India - which, as we reported earlier this year, has turned into a net importer of sugar.

As you can see below, sugar prices are starting to go "parabolic." Commodity rallies typically end with a big blow off and stories like this one by the mainstream financial media, questioning where the world will ever find enough sugar to meet demand.

Sugar mania is running wild!
(Source: Barchart.com)

If you are an adventurous trader, you could initiate a long position and try to ride this spike up for as long as it goes. I personally do not have this stomach for this, having been burned one too many times on the inevitable reversal. Parabolic spikes rarely end quietly.

I hope that you, Dear Reader, played this trade better than I did. Since writing on March 1 that sugar could stage an impressive rally, my follow through trading was quite poor...to say the least!

Ah well, if you missed this rally - be patient. We should get another shot at it - at least according to our favorite sugar guru Jim Rogers, who told Bloomberg:

“Sugar is certainly going to go much, much higher during the course of the bull market,” Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, said in an Aug. 6 interview in Singapore. “Sugar is still 70 percent below its all-time high and not many things in life are 70 percent below what they were in 1974. Sugar has a wonderful future.”

What's the easiest way to invest in agriculture if you don't trade futures? Check out our recent piece: 5 Easy Ways to Invest in Sugar...And Other Agricultural Commodities.

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