As you might have noticed, there are some changes to this website:
- The focus in the future will be on international markets, as shown on my profile [1]: S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq, Russell 2000, Hang Seng, Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead, Wheat, Corn, Soybeans, Sugar, Coffee, Cotton, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, US Dollar, Canadian Dollar, Australian Dollar, Swiss Frac, British Pound, Euro FX, Japanese Yen, and US Treasury Notes. I will make appropriate changes to my profile if I do participate in other markets.
- cbox has been repositioned. I have been thinking of where to put it. I guess is OK to leave it on the right-hand side here. In the future, this website will become more of a content-driven one.
Some humble suggestions:
- With the right foresight, there's a great deal of opportunities out there for us all to take advantage of. However, you must have the appropriate tools and access to the relevant markets. Gold was at 730 [2] when I suggested buying, Natural Gas at 7.X [3], Crude Oil at 104.04 [4, 5, 6, 7], etc. I won't proclaim that I can always deliver the best performers, but if you have limited yourself to just 1 or 2 asset classes, there's a great deal you will be missing out.
- There are only 2 kinds of markets in this world -- no, I am not going to say bull and bear. Is a lot simpler than that: paper assets and real assets. The recent global financial meltdown signalled a very significant change -- the shift from paper assets to real assets. Commodities are doing great because of such a flight to real assets. This is the thesis behind the very core of my trading/investing decisions after I predicted the now apparent US recession back in September 2007.
- When a promoter comes along, he has a dream, and he will want to sell it to you because you have the cash. However, it is the promoter who has the cash eventually and you are left with the dream. If you want to buy, do it early [Note: As usual, this comment is made without market timing]. CNBC and Bloomberg are now starting to mention commodities more and more. The "herds" are following...
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