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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
The newsletter business can be a fairly dangerous, even cutthroat
business to enter into. Some people do it on a whim, and some do it
merely because they have no reason not to. Bill Bonner reminisces about
a few industry legends...
Was
ever there a fairer métier than ours? The poor carpenter risks cutting
his fingers or banging his knee. The used car salesman’s hearing goes
bad as soon as he takes up his job: “No, I don’t hear any rattle,”
says he. The foot-soldier gets sent to a Godforsaken hole like Iraq,
where the women are covered up and the liquor stashed away.
But
in our trade...hardly a newspaper or a day passes without a good laugh.
And our only occupational hazard is a rupture of the midriff.
Perhaps
we should explain how we got our start...and whence cometh this
heightened sense of humor. Most people, after all, read the news pages
for information. They lack the proper training and perspective to fully
enjoy all the jolly news. The consequence is that they are always in
danger of taking its humbug seriously and finding the people in its
headlines important. If you really want to appreciate the media, on the
other hand, you have to get close enough to see how it works - like a
prairie dog peering into a hay bailer - but not so close that you get
caught up in it yourself. The newsletter industry is perfect; it is part
of the media, but it wouldn’t be mistaken for a reputable part.
More
than 30 years ago, we began our career in the investment newsletter
business. Those were the days! They were even more fun than today. Years
of television, heavy-handed regulation, and waiting in line for airport
security, have taken much of the lightheartedness out of American life.
In its place, a kind of earnest timidity has settled over the 50 states.
Everything is forbidden, or else it is compulsory - especially in the
financial markets. You can barely talk about an honest investment
without some ambitious prosecutor wanting to make a federal case out of
it.
But
back in the ‘70s, the folks you met in the newsletter trade were even
wilder and more disreputable than those that are in it today. At one
investment conference, we remember an investment advisor from East
Germany. He had escaped the Soviets’ grip by stealing a small plane
and flying to the west. This alone made him a bit of a hero back in the
‘70s. But his talk to investors endeared him further. He gave the
following discourse:
“Take
a look a zis chart,” he would begin, pointing to the bottom of what
appeared to be a wave pattern. “Investing is reeelly verry simple. You
just buy at zee bottom. Heere! Zen, ven ze stock goes up, vat do ve do?
Ve sell. Heere! [Pointing to the top of the wave pattern.] It is reeelly
verrry simple.”
“Well,
what if the stock doesn’t go up,” asked an investor, fresh off the
Great Plains and not prepared for patterns or people that weren’t
perfectly straight.
“Ah...ve
just keep our eyes on ze chart. If it doesn’t go up, ve don’t buy
it.”
We
don’t recall the man’s name. It was something like Dr. Friederich
Hasselbauer. We were always a bit suspicious of financial advisors who
used the ‘Dr.’ title, though many did. Especially when they spoke
with thick German accents. We imagined that they had been conducting
experiments on Jews before they entered the financial markets.
And
then there was the Quack man. His name was ‘Red’ Robin. As near as
we could figure, he liked ducks. So he called his financial analysis
‘The Quack Report.’ Apparently, he had once made his money paving
airport runways. Then, in his 50s or 60s, he decided to devote himself
to financial analysis and saving the world from a small group of
criminal conspirators known as the Bilderburgers, who were in cahoots
with the English government. Once, flying on the Concorde across the
Atlantic, ‘Ol ‘Red’ saw the U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer, it
must have been Lord Barber, on the same flight. He told us that he
decided to confront his lordship right then and there, when he had the
chance.
“I
just went up to him and I said, ‘I’m on to you...ol’ buddy...”
It
must have been quite a scene. ‘Red’ Robin was a funny-looking fellow
with a paunchy stomach who always dressed in orange coveralls - which
made him look a little like a red-breasted sapsucker. Why he wore orange
overalls, we don’t know; perhaps they were a holdover from his days
working on airport runways when he didn’t want the cement trucks to
run him down.
Red
also had funny ideas about publishing investment advice. He offered
readers a ‘Lifetime Guarantee’ - they could have their money back
anytime. But then, he added a caveat: ‘My life, not yours.’ As it
turned out, the guarantee was less valuable than readers imagined - or
Red himself had hoped. He was gunned down on a beach in Costa Rica, we
were told.
He
happened to be there on business with his partners - a shady pair who
made their living selling business franchises to unwary investors. It
turned out that the two had taken out a large insurance policy on him.
After he was shot, the two partners put him in their car and drove to
the hospital. It was a long, slow drive, according to industry legend.
Poor Red didn’t make it.
Many
stories surround the partners. One was a huge man called, let us say,
“Professor Smith.” He could barely walk and was only able to get
about with the help of two canes. How he came to be ambling along on a
tropical beach with the Quack man, we don’t know. But equally
implausibly - he was said to have had an affair with a young woman. When
his wife found out about it, she demanded a divorce. The Professor
realized that it would be cheaper to have her killed than to pay off a
divorce settlement; so, perhaps with the help of his partner, the poor
old lady was soon history. Then, Red Robin was history, and not too much
later, the Professor too feared for his life. He sent out a desperate
letter to a few newsletter gurus telling them that his partner was going
for him next.
We do
not report this as fact; we weren’t there. But what we are told is
that his alarming epistle did not especially move the fellows in the
newsletter business to whom he appealed. If someone were out to get the
Professor, they figured he probably deserved it. Whether he had it
coming or not, we don’t know, but that he got it soon after we have no
doubt.
“Hmmm...”
said a friend who had gotten his letter. “I guess he wasn’t
lying.”
But
that was the strange milieu in which we decided to make our career. What
was delightful about it were the nuts and kooks, the charlatans and
dreamers, the brazen hucksters and earnest geniuses that made up the
industry. Here were thinkers whose thoughts were untainted by any trace
of advanced doctrinaire theory, let alone rudimentary training of any
sort. Here were mountebanks and scalawags galore...along with a few
saints...dispensing market wisdom, stock recommendations, and
macro-analysis so far reaching you needed a Hubble telescope to see
where it came from. And here, too, were the sort of men whom rich widows
were warned about. And the sort of theorists that made you wonder about
the limits of human reason itself.
“There’s
old A.J.,” a friend remarked recently, about a colleague. “He never
stops thinking. Too bad. He should stop. Really.”
Thought
leads to action. Which frequently leads to reconsideration and regret.
Or, maybe not. Our friend, Gary North, began studying the possible
consequences of the Y2K computer problem in the late ‘90s. The more
closely he looked, the more alarmed he became. He began writing about
the subject, and the more he explored it...the more he thought about
it...the more convinced he became that it would lead to a complete
meltdown of modern society. He looked and he saw commerce coming to a
stop. He saw trains that couldn’t run without electronic instruction.
He saw cash machines frozen up. He saw power plants idled by their
computer brains. And what would happen to all that electronic
information - bank accounts, trading records, inventories - on which the
whole financial world depended? He saw millions of people with no
money...and then no food. He saw riots in the streets...and worse.
Then,
he looked around and saw that he and his family were as exposed to the
menace as everyone else. He decided to take precautions, moving his
family to an isolated rural area where they would be safe from the
apocalypse he saw coming.
Maybe
he would be wrong, he reasoned. But what if he were right? The cost of
being right - and failing to protect himself - could be catastrophic. He
moved to a mountain hollow, buried provisions and began the countdown to
the year 2000.
Of
course, when the big day came...nothing happened. The clocks worked. The
trains ran. The power was still on. Apparently, not a single cash
machine failed.
People
pointed and laughed. But was he wrong? What if the odds of a meltdown
had been only 1 in 100 or 1 in a 1,000? Was he not right to give a
warning...in the strongest possible terms? And wasn’t it partly
because of him and others like him that billions were spent to correct
the problem before January 2000?
Colorful
eccentrics, careful analysts, cheerful conmen, and self-assured
delusionals trying to figure out how things are put together - this is
the world of investment gurus.
But
guess what? The gurus are often right. True, some financial gurus have
gone broke following their own advice. But many have gotten rich.
In
the late ‘70s, we undertook a study - with Mark Hulbert, who is still
at it - of how well these financial gurus actually perform. We
wouldn’t presume to summarize Mark Hulbert’s nearly 30 years of
work; we will just tell you want we took from it:
There
is no right way to invest.
Investment
gurus are an original bunch. They come up with all sorts of systems,
ideas and approaches. Almost all of them are successful - sometimes.
There are a lot of different ways to invest and to make money. And often
one that works spectacularly well in one period may collapse completely
when the market changes course. So too, an approach that often works
poorly under certain market conditions will work poorly in other
conditions.
But
generally, an investment advisor who works hard to develop and refine a
system...and who sticks with it...can do reasonably well, sometimes. He
can be a technical analyst...a chartist...a Graham and Dodd
follower...even an astrologer. Almost any disciplined approach, pursued
intelligently and steadily, can pay off.
We
have a theory that explains why this is so. Investing is, when you get
down to the basement of it, a competitive undertaking. If you do what
everyone else does, you will get the same returns as everyone else. In
order to get better returns, you have to do things differently.
Investment gurus seem to be favored, in this regard, by their own
originality and quirky self-reliance. “Sometimes right, Sometimes
Wrong,” they say. “But never in Doubt.” Taken together, they are
probably the most independent and contrary professional class in the
world. And this contrariness, alone, seems to put them at odds with the
great mass of lumpen investors, allowing them to make more - or, often
less - than the common results.
By
contrast, what seems to doom the average investor is the same mushy
quality that seems to be ruining the whole country. He will wait in line
- without a word of protest - while guards frisk girl scouts and old
ladies for dangerous weapons. If the mob is large enough, he can’t
wait to be a part of it...and fears being isolated from it. And he will
believe any line of guff - no matter how fantastic - as long as everyone
else falls for it also. Dow 36,000? House prices always go up? I.O. Neg
Am mortgage?
A man
who follows a newsletter guru has no guarantee of making money; but a
man who follows this great mass of conventional investors is practically
guaranteed that he will not.

© 2007 Bill Bonner
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Bill
Bonner is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. He is also the
author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller
Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st
Century (John Wiley & Sons).
In
Bonner and Wiggin’s follow-up book, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an
Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic brand of humor to
expose the nation for what it really is - an empire built on delusions.
Daily Reckoning readers can buy their copy of Empire of Debt - now
available in paperback - just click on the link below:
The
Most Feared Book in Washington! http://www.dailyreckoning.com/empireofdebt.html
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