The fiancial men who are fuelling the panic

October 24th, 2008

Today has been yet another Black Friday, with Far Eastern stock markets plunging by between 8 and 12 per cent. This provoked further falls in London and on Wall Street, after a few days when it seemed the markets were steadying, following the injection of vast sums of money into the banking system, by governments in the US, Britain and Europe. But some financial men seem determined to to urge the market on and drive the markets done even more steeply than in the Great Crash of 1929.

Stand up Martin D. Weiss, Ph D.

In his newsletter today, headlined:

Urgent Warning: Crash Today!

he boasts that in July he predicted the Dow Jones would fall to 7200.

He writes piously

I prayed it would not come to pass, but now that it’s here…

He then goes on to say that he does not think that 7200 is the bottom. Investors must expect further falls. So he urges them to sell half their holdings of equities and mutual funds immediately. If big investors followed his advice that would indeed produce a bigger crash than 1929.

I am not going to predict how far the Dow will fall, nor how long and deep the recession will last.

But before you follow Dr Weiss’s advice, I would ask you to note his prediction of the Dow at 7200 is not yet here. With most of the day over the lowest point the Dow reached was about 8200.

It was financial men like Weiss, who drove the stock markets up to astronomic levels on the assumption that the boom would go on ever. Now they are trying to profit by urging the market down.

It is up to rest of us to stay cool. And it is up to Governments to give a clear message to the financiers, the banks and the big companies, that, they, like all other citizens, need regulation.

Below is the Weiss newsletter in full. In my next blog I will suggest a few things that ordinary citizens, like me and my readers, can do to reduce the severity of the recession.

 
 
 
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Urgent warning: Crash TODAY!
by Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D. Dear Subscriber,

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.

Today could go down in history as one of the worst stock market crashes of all time, and it gives me no pleasure to see my dire warnings come true. I have dreaded this day as often as I have predicted it.

In July, our Safe Money Report declared the Dow would fall to 7,200. And virtually every day since, our e-mails have warned, nagged, cajoled and shouted the same message from the rooftops.

I prayed it would not come to pass. But now that it’s here, I have a new prayer …

That you are out of danger and ready for the worst;

That the worst will strike swiftly and end swiftly;

That, once we hit bottom, no matter how ugly the future may appear, you, we and others will have the fortitude to reinvest, help get the country back on its feet, and move on to better times.

Today and for the foreseeable future, however, the market is going down. Asian stock markets have crashed this morning. The global economy is sinking rapidly. Deflation is sweeping the globe.

(For more on deflation, be sure not to miss the important alert we sent you yesterday, as well as my October 6 issue “Sinking Rapidly into Depression.”)

Yes, our long-standing forecast for this phase of the decline is 7,200 on the Dow. But do not assume that will be the final bottom.

With a global depression striking rapidly … with most U.S. corporations likely to sink into the red … and with many going bankrupt … it would be foolish to expect that any line drawn on any chart can be a reliable barrier to further sharp declines.

In his testimony before Congress yesterday, former Fed Chairman Greenspan confessed that this financial crisis may be the worst in 100 years. If that’s the case, then it’s not beyond the realm of reason to anticipate a stock market decline that’s also among the worst in 100 years.

If you are not ready — if you followed a broker who told you to just “buy, buy, hold, hold” — here’s what to do:

Step 1. Call your broker immediately and tell him to sell HALF of your stocks and stock mutual funds at the market. If he tries to talk you out of it, don’t let him. And if you’d like to be prepared for the counter-arguments he may give you, see my September 30 issue, “Urgent from Martin: Your Last Chance to Act.”

Important: Do not be deterred by any trading halts if they should occur. Today, for example, if the Dow Jones Industrials falls 10% (869 points) prior to 2 PM Eastern Time, the New York Stock Exchange will declare a one-hour trading halt.

Alternatively, if the Dow falls the 10% between 2 PM and 2:30 PM, the NYSE will declare a half-hour trading halt. However, after 2:30 PM, the 10% limit will no longer be in effect. Therefore, even in a worst case scenario, there should be ample opportunity for you to execute your orders to avoid further damage.

Step 2. We may get a sharp rally at any time, especially if the government intervenes. If so, use it as your opportunity to sell the balance. This is where I believe your broker or adviser can be of value to you, helping you set exit price targets (limit orders) and giving you his opinion regarding how much of a rally might be reasonable to expect.

Step 3. If you are working with a money manager, ask if he has strategies specifically designed to profit in bear markets. If the answer is “yes,” switch the amount you and he feel are appropriate to that strategy, erring on the side of more rather than less. If the answer is “no,” ask him to follow steps #1 and #2 above. Then, move your funds to a manager who does deploy bear market strategies.

(For more information on bear market strategies, see Bear Market Defense Forum Transcript Part I and Part II.)

Step 4. Just because your money is in cash, don’t assume that cash is safe. There’s a real chance the global banking bailout will fail.

(For the reasons, see our recent whitepaper submitted to Congress on September 25, “Proposed $700 Billion Bailout Is Too Little, Too Late to End the Debt Crisis; Too Much, Too Soon for the U.S. Bond Market.” Also see our recent Congressional submission, “Many Banks and Thrifts Overly Reliant on ‘Hot Money’ Deposits: Why an FDIC Coverage Increase to $250,000 May Not Stop Bank Runs and Could Cause Other Collateral Damage.”)

If the global bailout does fail, as I fear it will, an international banking holiday could ensue, trapping your cash when you may want or need it the most. To avoid this danger, move as much of your cash as you can to U.S. Treasury bills or a Treasury-only money market fund. (For more information on how to buy Treasury bills, be sure to watch our 1-hour emergency Q&A video and read this recent message from our affiliate.)

Step 5. If you continue to hold stocks that you’re unwilling or unable to sell, carefully consider the instructions in my November 2007 report, “How to Protect Your Stock Portfolio From the Spreading Credit Crunch.”

Step 6. A crisis like this one can be a nightmare for nearly everyone. But crisis is also opportunity — for the country to heal itself and for you to build your wealth.

Investors who have followed our recommendations to use contrarian investments are doing just that right now. The more the market falls, the more money they make. And since markets usually fall faster than they rise, the speed and magnitude of the potential profits are among the greatest of any time in modern history.

In 1929, my father borrowed $500 from his mother and used it to sell short the stock market. He told me that, by the time the market hit bottom, he had close to $100,000. And he didn’t start before the crash; he actually began in April of 1930 after the ’29 crash.

Today, fortunately, you don’t have to short the market to make money in a crash. You can use investments that limit your risk and require no borrowing or margin.

Consider these strategies for a portion of your funds. You can do it on your own. Or, if you’d like some guidance, call or write.

The number of Weiss Research’s inverse ETF trading publication is 800-393-1706. Or, for a managed account program dedicated to bear market investing, call our separate affiliate at 800-814-3045. They can also advise you on how to exit the market in an orderly fashion.

No matter what, do not delay. But also do not act in panic. Your response to this crash should be both prompt and planned; both bold and prudent.

And no matter how bad the future may appear, do not forget what I have been saying from the outset: This is not the end of the world. Our country has been through worse before, and we survived. We will survive this time as well.

Good luck and God bless!

Martin


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