Paul Tudor Jones: Gold's Undervalued and Bonds Are a Curve Flattener Play [View article]
CLUELESS READERS ON THIS SITE<ALWAYS CHASING THE NEXT HOT TREND>>>JUST LIKE JIM CRAMMER ON CNBC>>>YOUR ASSET ALLOCATION IS THE MOST IMPORTANT THING FOR YOUR PORTFOLIO>>>&... STOP LISTENING TO PEOPLE WITH CRYSTAL BALLS TELLING YOU THE FUTURE
Look up this mutual fund...PRPFX...it owns 20 percent coins and bullion.....its called Permanent Portfolio....been around since 1981..........Look at the returns and volitility over its life...VERY INTERESTING fund ....its based on the book by Harry Brown called Fail Safe Investing.......Most people here are gamblers looking for the next Hot investment.....Please read Fail Safe Investing and it may change your outlook on investing...It cant hurt..bogleheads.com has a running discussion trying to tweak this fund....
And you proved that you have an IQ in the Lower 50 percent
On Jul 09 05:35 PM jrainspe wrote:
> This whole discussion is a fool's argument. There is intrinsically > no difference between a piece of plastic you call a "gold asset card" > and the metal itself. Except for jewelery, gold does not add anything > to the quality of one's life. You can't eat it; you can't drink it; > it doesn't cure disease; in fact, of itself it does nothing, just > like the one dollar bill in your wallet or a gold asset card. The > fact that humans place one inanimate object as "more valuable" than > another inanimate object is only one of the reasons I have very little > respect for humans as a whole. Remember, 50% of the population have > an IQ of 100 or less.
Paul Tudor Jones: Gold's Undervalued and Bonds Are a Curve Flattener Play [View article]
Groundbreaking WSJ Story on Gold [View article]
Groundbreaking WSJ Story on Gold [View article]
On Jul 09 05:35 PM jrainspe wrote:
> This whole discussion is a fool's argument. There is intrinsically
> no difference between a piece of plastic you call a "gold asset card"
> and the metal itself. Except for jewelery, gold does not add anything
> to the quality of one's life. You can't eat it; you can't drink it;
> it doesn't cure disease; in fact, of itself it does nothing, just
> like the one dollar bill in your wallet or a gold asset card. The
> fact that humans place one inanimate object as "more valuable" than
> another inanimate object is only one of the reasons I have very little
> respect for humans as a whole. Remember, 50% of the population have
> an IQ of 100 or less.