Keyboard worrier

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Sound counsel

Today's Daily Reckoning (I've just received it by email) offers some tips for managing your wealth in the current circumstances:

When trends turn negative, it is better to buck them...to head in a different direction. This is particularly so when the bad trends approach their inevitably catastrophic consequences.

That is what we think may be coming soon - with falling asset prices and falling standards of living in America, and probably in most of the other Anglo-Saxon countries. This is not a time to 'go with the flow,' in other words. The flow will not be going where you want to get.

As a practical matter, the course of action that is best in easy times is essential in hard times. Here, we spell it out for you:

First, you should focus on your own private business...or your own source of revenue. (Bonds, rents, retirement fund, dividend yields...whatever.) Make sure it is solid, protected, efficient and productive. Make sure it is something you understand...something you can see with your own eyes, run by people you trust. If you don't really understand it...or if it involves any form of "enhanced leveraged credit"...dump it.

Second, own the property you want to own, not the property you're hoping will go up in price. Begin, of course, with your own house. Is it the house you really want to live in for the next 5, 10, 20 years? Think long-term; the housing slump could easily last 10 years or more. Then, think about the other property you own. Would you still want to own it is if it went down 30% in price? If not, you might want to reconsider.

Third, make sure your savings and investments are diversified out of the dollar. Most experts now expect the buck to stabilise, but you can't be sure. Ten years from now, the dollar could easily be worth only 10% of its value today. Put some money into euro and yen deposits. Put some into gold too.

Fourth, once your finances are secure you can begin to think about speculating. But don't confuse speculating with investing. You speculate for entertainment, not as a serious way to finance your family. Are stock prices going up or down? You can't know. Nor can you know what prices land, commodities, currencies or anything else will sell for in the future. Don't speculate with money you're not prepared to lose.

This all seems pretty sensible to me, especially since the Dow's dropped 300 points.

UPDATE

Dow down 387 at close.

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