Quote from makloda:
Faber has a record is a little better than 50% accoding to CXO, a tad better than rolling dice. Much better than most of Wall St. still, which are much much worse.
He made many excellent calls, specifically his focus on dollar weakness and a secular precious metal/commodity bull market. But he also found himself like a deer in the headlights at times (see the 2003 rally, or the 2006 summer rally). Note how he was constantly talking about a coming treasury bear market that never materialized (over the last 9 years anyways):
http://www.cxoadvisory.com/gurus/Faber/
We have had this discussion before so for once I will let Faber answer himself with a quote from one of his newsletters.
There are some people who believe that we investment advisors and fund managers should know everything and that our forecasts should always be accurate.
The forecasting record of economists, strategists, and analysts is extremely poor.
As the late Peter Bernstein observed, âin their calmer moments, investors recognize their inability to know what the future holds.
In moments of extreme panic or enthusiasm, however, they become remarkably bold in their predictions: they act as though uncertainty has vanished and the outcome is beyond doubt.
Reality is abruptly transformed into that hypothetical future where the outcome is known. These are rare occasions, but they are unforgettable: major tops and bottoms in markets are defined by this switch from doubt to certainty.â
