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The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit from It: Make a Fortune by Investing in Gold and Other Hard Assets
The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit from It: Make a Fortune by Investing in Gold and Other Hard Assets

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Authors: James Turk, John Rubino
Publisher: Doubleday Business
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy New: $8.38
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 45 reviews
Sales Rank: 6000

Media: Paperback
Edition: Reprint
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.8

ISBN: 0385512244
Dewey Decimal Number: 332
EAN: 9780385512244
ASIN: 0385512244

Publication Date: January 29, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20081203230030T

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  • Kindle Edition - The Coming Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit from It: Make a Fortune by Investing in Gold and Other Hard Assets

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

The dollar is in trouble. Its value on foreign exchange markets has been falling for the past six years, and now its gradual decline is about to become a rout. This spells big trouble for the American economy—but potential riches for smart investors. In The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit from It, financial gurus James Turk and John Rubino show how the dollar arrived at this precipice, why it will continue to plunge, and how you can profit from the resulting financial crisis.

The United States today is the world’s biggest debtor nation. To finance this mountain of debt, we’re flooding the world with dollars. The resulting oversupply of dollars will cause its value to decline until it is displaced as the world’s dominant currency. Precious metals will soar in value, and gold will reclaim its monetary role at the center of the global financial system.

James Turk, a leading gold authority and the founder of GoldMoney.com, and John Rubino, editor of the popular Web site DollarCollapse.com offer strategies for investing in gold coins, gold stocks, gold-based digital currencies, and other hard assets to create a profitable portfolio.

The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit from It is a must read for every citizen and investor.




Customer Reviews:   Read 40 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Good Advice...If Things Go Their Way   February 27, 2005
 207 out of 232 found this review helpful

The authors are convinced that the dollar will collapse, but their book is far from convincing. Even if the dollar does collapse, it might not do so for years or even decades. They offer up historical and theoretical reasons why the dollar should collapse, and they sound persuasive, but they never show exactly WHY the dollar MUST collapse.

That said, if the dollar does collapse, then following their advice should prove fruitful. They present a number of different ways for both relatively conservative and aggressive investors to profit. But, embarrasingly, one of the contra-dollar mutual funds they recommend (PIMCO Foreign Bond) is actually a dollar-hedged bond fund, meaning it's not designed to benefit from a dollar decline. I guess they didn't bother to read the prospectus.

Their model portfolios would have even "conservative" investors basically place all their bets on a falling dollar. This is arrogant and irresponsible. Unless you're a speculator who can afford to lose big, you need some diversification (cash, short- term U.S. bonds, dividend stocks, etc.) so that a dollar rally won't lead to huge losses. I'm about 1/3 gold/contra-dollar, 1/3 cash/short-term bonds, and 1/3 dividend stocks. (I am avoiding long-term bonds completely until we see at least 7% yields to compensate for the risk.) When I become bearish on stocks, which I expect to do by 2006, then I may go up to 49% contra-dollar and 51% cash, but I'd never bet more than half my dough on a single investment strategy and no responsible advisor would suggest that you do.

Strangely, the publisher touts praise of the book from ultra-bear Robert Prechter, whose predictions have been pretty lousy of late. Prechter is a deflationist who has been a long-term bear on gold for quite some time. Did Prechter bother to read this gold bug tome before he lavished praise on it?

Gold is money, yes, and everyone should have some. But that doesn't mean "money" is or will be the most profitable asset to hold. We just don't know. If this book can convince some of those people who have been taught by Wall Street and CNBC that all they need is S&P 500 index funds -- and maybe some bonds -- to diversify into hard assets like gold, it will serve a useful prupose. If it turns sane people into raging gold bugs who mortgage their house to stockpile gold coins and go on margin to buy shares in mining companies (something the authors actually suggest since they're so sure gold is going up), then this book is just another vehicle for creating more gold bug losers who get caught up in a mania and ride it down to the inevitable crash (the irrationally euphoric gold bugs of the late 70s are STILL trying to recoup their losses).



3 out of 5 stars More than a little extreme .......   February 24, 2005
 115 out of 122 found this review helpful

The authors do a good job of explaining how to invest in gold and how to put a portfolio together (from coins to mining stock).
Following the advice and investing all your funds into gold and a limited number of stocks could be self destructive though.

However, as the authors point out, the Government has confiscated gold before - and could again. If things get as bad as they suggest Governments could nationalize mines ........

If the authors are on target with their predictions, investing now in an assault rifle, a cabin in the woods and alot of tinned food would make a better investment than gold.

Gold could very well make a great investment given a sliding dollar; the argument that the dollar will collapse completely is taken to an absolute extreme (the Dollar Crisis, Causes Consequence Cures, covers the same ground more convincingly).

Useful book - worth considering as part of your personal investment strategy. However, I wouldn't plan my portfolio around the authors advice alone - having too great a dependance on any one asset class can be bad. Advice on how to invest in gold (practicalities)is very good though.



1 out of 5 stars Some acceptable basic information and very poor advice   February 21, 2005
 100 out of 119 found this review helpful

This book has some good introductory information, and is probably of some use to anyone considering gold or silver as an investment.

With that in mind, these guys are gold bugs, or hucksters putting the hard sell on for gold. Period. Their portfolio "diversification" strategies are basically between holding actual gold and mining stocks. I mean...thats it! NOTHING else. That is just plain loopy, and frankly irresponsible to recommend. We are to conclude that NO other commodity would be worthy of investment? We are to conclude the entire world will only want to hold gold, and no other asset? Yes, in an absolute financial melt-down, gold and silver would offer some big benefits, but folks owning other basic materials would not do so badly either. Maybe better. That bears discussion, but gets very little.

They are either lazy in their writing, or are deliberately overlooking certain facts in conveying their advice. For instance, in their chapter on direct investment in gold, they make it sound like holding physical gold basically has no advantages to investing in digital gold. I found that curious, since there are obvously some advantages to holding the actual gold, versus the representational forms. Then, later in the book, they finally fessed up and said that James Turk is one of the main backers of "digital gold". After putting a figleaf on how it is a conflict to recommend this means of owning gold, they devote a whole chapter to how this will be the NEW currency, and the only way to hold "cash."

Their advice is poorly considered in at least a few places, so it makes me wonder how much thought they put into anything else. Their discussion of aggressive strategies very briefly discusses buying mining stocks on margin. They show the gross profits from margin trading, but do not even mention the cost of borrowing the funds to do so. Yet, in other chapters they rant about how its VERY dangerous to have variable rate loans, since these rates will go through the roof! So guys, wouldn't it be worth understanding how a soaring rate scenario would affect your margin holdings? Nah! Just throw out a few numbers and move on to the digital gold thing.

I have just read "Hot Commodities" by Jim Rogers, and it is a clearly superior book. No obvious hype, a lot more facts and logical thinking. By the way, he makes a pretty good argument why gold is likely not such a good investment compared to other commodities. Now...he too is selling his RICI index of commodities, so he is not fully objective. But at least he makes a reasonable attempt at proving out his thesis.

As for some of the above reviews, they smell a lot like shills. They are so over the top in praise of this mediocre book, I would discount them considerably.



5 out of 5 stars Reality catches up   April 19, 2005
 53 out of 56 found this review helpful

The world is today awash with liquidity. Thanks to the extravagant living backed by paper currency, America is today the world's largest debtor nation. Though debt by itself is not bad, it is dangerous both to the borrower and the lender if it is not backed by productive assets. This book is about the origin and consequences of such a situation and the currency that has helped inflate the global monetary bubble on a scale that is threatening to burst on our faces.

First the book gives a good definition of money as a standard of value, store of value and a medium of exchange. Going by this definition, over the centuries mankind has experimented with several monetary equivalents including cattle, sea shells, metals and the like. Whatever the medium, there was a definite asset equivalent attempted to be stored in money. This system got refined over the years and ultimately gold emerged as the undisputed monetary standard in the nineteenth century. Under this system, governments and central banks had to maintain gold equivalent in their vaults for the paper currency issued by them. Excessive government spending was thus effectively curtailed and exchange rates were automatically balanced. It is the gradual deviation and debasement and later the outright abandonment of this system in 1971 that seems to have led to today's situation where the dollar has just over 1% of its value as gold reserves with the Fed.

In an imminent possibility of a virtual run on the dollar by creditor nations and oil exporting countries, the dollar is bound to plunge. Gold expressed in dollar equivalent will surge. This logic does not need any further explanation. But what is more interesting is the discussion on alternate investment strategies that can outperform gold in real terms. Silver emerges as a surprising and sure alternative. Unlike gold, silver gets consumed in large quantities in industrial use and not reclaimed. Hence the quantity of silver available above the ground is actually reducing. When there is a rush to convert paper currency into precious metals, the authors expect silver to rise faster than gold due to these fundamentals. If gold is a Boeing 747, silver will be an F-16 is a good analogy.

The book discusses some facts on mining of gold and different categories of companies involved in this industry. Depending on factors like asset base, quality of mines, financial and operational leverage, quality of management and country risk, each of these are analyzed for their risks and potential returns.

Numismatics also gets a fair share of the coverage.

The book is however bound to come under severe criticism on the following grounds.

- Gold is not the only possible store of value
- The fundamental principles on which monetary expansion kick starts economic expansion is completely ignored
- In a global economy where currencies are tightly linked and freely traded, only the dollar is isolated for criticism
- Unbridled monetary expansion is bad, but return to gold standard is ridiculous in a modern knowledge based economy
- Large transaction and holding costs in buying gold is not the efficient way to deal with investments.

Despite these shortcomings, gold will continue to retain its excellent qualities and reading this book will only add glitter to this noble metal whenever you see it.



5 out of 5 stars Rational thesis in an irrational world!   January 19, 2005
 52 out of 65 found this review helpful

I like this book. The documentation is solid and the logical exposition is nearly flawless. The authors build a compelling case for restructuring one's portfolio to include a large gold component. If one scans the charts, COMEX gold has made a huge, rounding turn from 1996 to 2004. The high price of this formation is 420 and the low price 260. A measuring implication on this formation suggests an upside target price of 580, which is a potential 32% gain. [420-260=160+420=580.] Gold has completed this formation with a bullish, upside breakout. In order for gold to reach this target price, the dollar has to continue its slide to oblivion. However, there are signs that the dollar index is stabilizing and trying to climb to 90 from its current price of 83.

What makes me suspicious about the fruition of the authors' thesis is that there is too much company from other writers such as Richard Duncan, Ferdinand Lips, Jim Rogers, Peter Warburton, etc. It is arguable that this book presently represents the view of the crowd rather than expressing a contrarian worldview. In my experience, real, damaging crises arrive both quickly and unannounced. Seldom do we have the luxury of time for discussing the onset and progression of a crisis through the mass media in a calm, rational manner and have the year or more it takes to write and publish books about how to survive and prosper from the crisis. As a matter of fact, there is much evidence that when books about impending crises become available to the mass markets, the danger is substantially past. Irrationality - not rationality - is the ding an sich of financial markets!

Financial markets are discounting mechanisms that make the best use of forecasts, from all information which is known, to augur the likely level and trend of profits from nine to eighteen months in advance. What we read on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, Investor's Business Daily, or the Financial Times hardly qualifies as being news which can move the markets because the markets have already anticipated the impact of the events before the stories appeared in print.

To make matters worse, if the authors' thesis is correct and comes to pass, it is not likely that the average investor would have the prescience, ability, or resources necessary for weathering the financial storm - even armed with this book! A financial panic of this magnitude would have the most dire geopolitical consequences. Playing with numbers would be futile. The only safe harbor would be a move of one's person and possessions to some island of stability, such as Switzerland.

I personally believe that the severe decree can (and will) be averted. I feel that there is still resiliance in the western tradition. Most of the ills besetting the US today can be traced to a recent history of an overstrong dollar which gave rise to the Japanese and Chinese economic miracles, a highly-promoted culture of rampant consumerism, and the misguided, suicidal "free" trade agreements of the past twenty years. I think that the changing demographics in the US will encourage saving and investment over consumption, a rationalization of the current and capital account imbalances, and a total discrediting of and revulsion from the New World Order paradigm.

Don't worry - be happy!


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