Jim Rogers on CNBC

Quote from risktaker:

Hmmm, now that I think of it, since he has an interest in a commodity ETF with his name on it, it would probably not be smart of him to say that he's bearish on commodities. He might even get ousted, sued or something along those lines for promoting a commodity etf and yet at the same time proclaim bearishness on commodities. That might explain his perpetual bullishness on commodities.
At the very least there's *some* conflict of interest.

He's running the fund to start with, because he's bullish on commodities. Why would he come on CNBC and say he is bearish? If he is bearish, presumably he would disband the fund.
 
Quote from Landis82:

Agreed.

But if you saw the "interview" on CNBC you would have noticed the "tone" of Rogers and how he was completely stumped by the question!

Doesn't sound like someone that is involved in the equity markets whatsoever.


You're out to lunch on this one.
 
Funny thing is, I'd probably react the same way and I trade 100's of stocks daily myself.

It really depends on your trading style. I really don't give a crap about the individual stocks/companies. They're just a "vehicle" to a destination.


Quote from Landis82:

Agreed.

But if you saw the "interview" on CNBC you would have noticed the "tone" of Rogers and how he was completely stumped by the question!

Doesn't sound like someone that is involved in the equity markets whatsoever.
 
Quote from Landis82:

What is wrong with your reading comprehension?

He says he is a BULL on commodities and he can't buy any of the beaten down coal stocks, energy names, nat-gas companies, drillers, etc.???

Go figure.

Everyone knows he's a commodities bull ... in all the interviews I've seen of him, I don't think I've ever once heard him mention an individual commodities stock or any other individual name for that matter. Maybe he plays ETFs only, I don't know, or maybe he just doesn't like to be pinned down on calling individual companies.

Bottom line, there've been plenty of times when he's stated which sectors he bought and when. JR knows what he's doing and on the whole is pretty open about his investment ideas.
 
LOL.

Rogers gets people fired up.

Did some people here get caught in the tech bubble and missed the huge commodity run? Sour grapes. Here on ET? Nah. :D

Probably just because he's a super intelligent Master of the Universe.

Rogers started investing in commodities and telling people about them in the late 90's (look it up on Bloomberg) when most people were buying tech stocks at the top.

Rogers started shorting financials and THE INVESTMENT BANKS and telling people about it well before the crash (also on Bloomie). Too bad he didn't explain EXACTLY WHAT the IB's were doing. Maybe it could have been stopped before it morphed into a melt down.

Buffet also mentioned this derivative/IB problem in general, but didn't explain exactly what was happening either. You know he knew EXACTLY what the IBs were doing.

It's mildly annoying that nether explained it so the boob tube watchers could get it.

(oops meant to post this on the other thread)
 
exactly.


only ET gays are spending their time discussing if somebody trades or not.

the only that matters if he makes sense or not. full stop.
 
Quote from tomahawk:

Everyone knows he's a commodities bull ... in all the interviews I've seen of him, I don't think I've ever once heard him mention an individual commodities stock or any other individual name for that matter. Maybe he plays ETFs only, I don't know, or maybe he just doesn't like to be pinned down on calling individual companies.

Bottom line, there have been plenty of times when he's stated which sectors he bought and when. JR knows what he's doing and on the whole is pretty open about his investment ideas.

I recall that Rogers had said that ETFs were the way to go instead of mutual funds when ETFs were in their infancy.

As for his intentions to buy certain commodities, he leaves me confused. I recall an instant where he said, in an interview, he would by gold at $600, as he felt the IMF had to sell gold to cover their loans, and if it went to $900 he would buy.

What was wrong with buying it @ 700+ when he gave the interview? I must be missing something:confused:

He is proud to advertise that he covered his "shorts" in the equity market in October, but at no time did he ever state what equities he had shorted in the past.

Personally, I like to listen to his point of view as it is thought provoking, but will not necessarily let it interfere with my own trading as Rogers, in my opinion, is somewhat glib.
 
Quote from tomahawk:

Everyone knows he's a commodities bull ... in all the interviews I've seen of him, I don't think I've ever once heard him mention an individual commodities stock or any other individual name for that matter. Maybe he plays ETFs ...

He has said plainly all his money is tied up in his Rogers International Commodities Index. He started that index in 1998 to drive home the point that he was bullish on commodities even as everyone went ape-shit over tech stocks. He was going on CNBC 1998-2001 tell everyone they were full of sh*t. He deserves credit for that. Returns on his index are posted at the link below. Note his indices rebalance every year, thus automatically taking profits in the strongest commodity markets, and loading up on the weakest. Given recent volatility it might have made sense to rebalance every 6 months ... not sure.

In June the index was up 472% since 1998. That has come down to 214% at end-Oct. He is always overweight oil, which explains the recent volatility. On the plus side, the index will rebalance end-Dec, which means he will add more oil at expense of other commodities. He'll definitely top that 472% within the next 24 months.

http://www.rogersrawmaterials.com/page1.html
 
Back
Top