Investment Scoring & Timing
Newsletter
Predicting The Future
Michael Kilbach
Jun 22, 2007
As investors our most valuable
tool is definitely the crystal ball, but unfortunately we have
yet to find a wizard that is willing to part with his. So if
we do not have a crystal ball can we predict the future?
In our opinion the answer is
in part, yes. An absolute prediction would be to call specific
events at specific times with impeccable accuracy. We can not
do this, but we do believe we can reasonably hypothesize what
we think will happen in the markets. But what will give us the
insight we require to invest accordingly?
As contrarian investors we
have a few guidelines that help lead us through our investment
decisions. For example, we think the mass public is usually wrong
about investment decisions and therefore we do not want to subscribe
to their commonly accepted thoughts and theories. If we invest
like the average person, how can we do any better than the average
person?
We believe the interpretation
of commonly accepted theories such as Keynesian Economics, puts
restrictions, boundaries and rules in the minds of investors;
ideas that are portrayed as being absolutely perfect and therefore
the only way to examine economies. Keynesian Economics appears
to be interpreted by the mass public and media as more of a science
than a theory. Many television stations promote analysts justifying
this market movement and that market movement because of "this"
or "that" major news worthy event. The public is told
that gold will not rise in value and when it does the media seems
to explain the exact fundamental reasons as to why it did rise
and why it will soon fall. The public is told why interest rates
will not rise and then when they do, they are then told exactly
why it happened and why it will not last.
The media and mass public incorporating
common theories often appear to inaccurately predict what will
happen in the Economy and if proven wrong they quickly explain
what they think is the exact cause. Instead of learning from
their mistakes, re-evaluating their assumptions and strategies,
they seem to justify why they were not wrong by pointing the
finger at some unpredictable event that nobody could have known.
As a result we believe they continually duplicate the same wrong
assumptions and mistakes again and again.
For example, did the unpredictable
popping of the NASDAQ bubble cause other US markets to collapse,
or were all US stock markets over extended with excess speculative
capital and due for a correction? Was the NASDAQ the cause of
the other US stock market collapse or was the NASDAQ simply the
worst of a bad situation? Were there signs that the NADAQ and
other major US stock markets were overheated? Could it have been
anticipated and profited from?
It is our belief that those
who challenge these commonly accepted explanations and ask important
questions such as the ones above are the individuals who will
likely outperform the markets. We think that those who justify
their wrong predictions with unknowable events that could not
have been anticipated are doomed to fail again and again.
So in terms of investing now,
what is likely to happen going forward? In our opinion this answer
could easily be an entire article on its own. We think there
are many fundamental reasons why inflation will cause commodities
to rise and real estate, stocks and bonds to drop. In fact, we
will likely write another article in the future explaining many
of these factors; but for now let us simplify our reasoning.
We believe all markets are simply investment opportunities competing
for world funds. When one asset class becomes too popular, widely
accepted and inflated beyond reason, another asset class is neglected
and undervalued. The massive, popular markets of the past few
decades will have huge amounts of excess capital sloshing around
and looking for capital growth from lower ground. In our opinion
that lower ground is currently the unpopular commodities market,
and when investors realize that economic conditions have changed
and their "popular assets pool" is simply too full
of excess capital they will panic and pour that excess capital
into this new favorite asset class, commodities. We think that
in the coming years, interest rates will trend higher, causing
capital to flow out of stocks, bonds and real-estate into commodities.
So let us make a prediction
that should be documented for future reference. In the next twelve
to twenty four months, we believe interest rates will continue
to trend higher. We think this will continue to cause capital
to flow out of stocks, bonds and real-estate and into commodities
such as gold and silver. We also think the increasing wave of
inflation and rise in commodity prices will result in the media,
analysts and public pointing their fingers to some unknowable
fundamental cause. This event could be a war, foreign policy,
terrorist attack, climate change laws, natural disaster, foreign
market crash etc. The point is we think that the mass public,
media and analysts will not be able to anticipate the new investment
opportunity and see it coming but will claim they know exactly
why it happened after the fact. Their justification will likely
be incorrect and those who understand market psychology will
continue to profit from this apparently flawed set of principles.
We do not know what this fundamental event will be, but looking
into the future we predict something will happen. Some unforeseen
event will likely be used as blame for the sudden rise in inflation
and commodity prices. We will let time and our investment portfolio
tell us if we are correct. Of course we could be wrong and we
must be ready to react if our assumptions are incorrect, but
currently we are confident in our prediction and we are investing
accordingly.
Our favorite commodity and
current investment of choice is first silver and second gold.
We think these markets are in the very early stages of a major
bull market. At www.investmentscore.com
we do not have a crystal ball but instead we use common sense
analysis and custom built timing charts to help us determine
where investment funds are flowing. This helps us determine where
we think we should place our capital to benefit from what we
believe is the misinformed, slow moving investing public. Visit
our website www.investmentscore.com
to subscribe to our free newsletter and learn more about our
custom technical market timing charts and investment strategy.
Jun 22, 2007
Michael Kilbach
email: mkilbach&investmentscore.com
website: www.investmentscore.com
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