Quote from Cutten:
Long-term, noun:
A period of time after you exit your position, in which you miss the move which would have brought you back to breakeven.
Quote from Eight:
Ten+ years ago Martin Armstrong predicted an international credit crisis followed by hyperinflation. One down, one to go...
Quote from christianhgross:
Wow, you are falling for the fallacy that Taleb has pointed out...
Given enough monkeys then you will have a monkey who happens to have gotten 5 events right and thus will seem to have predictive power.
However, this is not the case since this monkey got the right answer due to the sheer amount of randomness.
My point is that while Martin Armstrong is right, I would rather know how many things he got wrong, and when.
Quote from texrex2002:
Seriously though, I can't see how all this deficit spending is going to not be inflationary. There may be short term contraction in some asset classes (real estate, for example), but I believe prices will inflate on things that I care about. I simply don't believe that this liquidity injection can be withdrawn, as Bernanke and gang are suggesting.
Quote from Landis82:
Question . . .
Why do you feel that it is not possible to withdraw the money that the FED has injected into the system?
Ever heard of "matched-sales"?
Quote from Eight:
Yeah.... f^&k Taleb, do your own due diligence, nobody is going to do it for you, that's for sure.
Armstrong was the head of the Princeton Economics Department... a monkey he is not. He predicted an international credit crisis for this decade ten+ years ahead of the event, that's a pretty good start. Now I'm looking to see if his prediction of ensuing hyperinflation comes true... and I'm shoring up my situation to be in a good position during and after if it happens, most are going to get run right over by it, sitting on fixed incomes or whatever, trusting Obama to take care of them I suppose...
Quote from ByLoSellHi:
Everything he says is truth. The guy's sharp and honest.
I knew who he was because he spoke of the 'realignment of the south' as one of the factors that would most greatly influence politics from the 80s onward.
Paulson's a piece of shit criminal, Bernanke is incompetent, and Geithner is Paulson's little lackey.
Obama has sold his soul to the devil, along with Rahm Emanuel and much of his staff.