Monday, December 01st, 2008

Hot Topics : $8 Trillion in Bailouts | Biotech Stock Bargains | The Greater Depression | Thanksgiving Turkeys

Fixing My Big Investment Mistake this Year

May 27th, 2008 | By Steve Sjuggerud | Category: Politics & Economics

Today, I’ll share with you the biggest mistake I made this year. I didn’t follow the “secret.” It’s a simple secret. And I should have known better.

This secret is important… It is the only way I know for you to really make ridiculous gains from investing without taking on crazy risks. The man I first heard the idea from actually did make ridiculous gains following it…

Jim Rogers made more than 4,000% in his Quantum Fund in the 1970s, when the overall stock market only rose 47%. (Then he retired in 1980, at age 37.)

Jim’s track record when he ran the Quantum Fund may be the best of anyone, ever. He was interviewed after he retired for a book called Market Wizards (which first came out in the late 1980s). In that book, he said something that has stuck with me since:

Markets often rise higher than you think is possible,
and fall lower than you can possibly imagine.

This was a revolutionary idea for me, at the time – a true “secret” to ridiculous gains.

Using his own secret, Jim Rogers could have bought oil at $13 a barrel a few years ago, and he could still be holding it at $130 a barrel today. Your typical investor would have sold somewhere along the way. But not Jim.

———- Advertisement ———-
Two Simple Words that Could Make You Rich

There’s a simple 2-word secret to generating bigger, faster gains on every trade you make.

In fact, most of the world’s richest traders use it to grow and protect their wealth…

… Like the legendary David Ryan – who used this secret to win the prestigious U.S. Investing Championship 3 times with a remarkable 3-year return of 1,379%.

Click here to learn how you can use it.
————————————-

(If anyone actually did buy at $13 and hold to $130, it was probably Jim. He started his Rogers Commodity Index Fund back in 1998, when oil bottomed, and he’s still a commodities bull today.)

In the mid-1990s, Jim and I sat next to each other at a black-tie dinner. We talked for hours. He struck me as one of the most original thinkers I’d met. After that dinner, I went back and re-read his chapter in Market Wizards.

I realized his quote, “Markets often rise higher than you think is possible, and fall lower than you can possibly imagine” was incredibly powerful. Once I adopted it, it allowed my readers to make huge fortunes…

The most recent huge winner is Seabridge Gold. I recommended shares of Seabridge at $2.64 to my subscribers a few years ago. Today it’s up to $23. We knew the markets could go higher than we imagined, so we didn’t get out too early. I might not have had the conviction to hold it that long without help from Jim Rogers.

Jim Rogers’ quote has made me – and my subscribers – large amounts of money. But this year, my biggest mistake was forgetting the other half of the quote: Markets can fall lower than you can possibly imagine.

Banks and homebuilders – two things I believe are cheap and hated – have fallen lower than I could have possibly imagined. I bought in too early. I thought I saw a glimmer of an uptrend. So far I’ve been wrong. Jim’s rule was right, as always. So right now, I’m watching my trailing stops closely on these.

If you want to make a whole lot of money investing, you have to stick to your rules. Jim Rogers’ rule is one of the most difficult to stick with… but it is one of the most profitable.

Oil moving up 900% is a great example of the market rising higher than you think possible. And financial stocks and housing, unfortunately, are a good example on the downside.

“Markets often rise higher than you think is possible, and fall lower than you can possibly imagine.”

This rule will make you a lot of money. And both halves of the rule are equally important.

Good investing,

Steve

Source: Fixing My Big Investment Mistake This Year


AdvertisementNew 5-currency Index CD from EverBank©. Apply today.

The new Debt-Free Index CD is comprised of equal parts Singapore dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc, Australian dollar and Brazilian real. Why these currencies? All 5 economies have a strong balance of payments—a factor that could aid performance against the U.S. dollar.

Of the 5 economies, only Australia has a trade deficit—and the gap appears to be narrowing. Concerned about investing in a weak U.S. dollar? Consider this new Index CD, it is available in 3- and 6-month terms with a $20,000 minimum deposit. Apply today here

This CD is FDIC insured against bank insolvency, but please keep in mind that you could lose principal as a result of currency fluctuation.



More on this topic (What's this?)
Link to Jim Rogers Blog
You Should Listen to Jim Rogers
Read more on Jim Rogers at Wikinvest
Tags: , , , , , , , ,

By Steve Sjuggerud

Related Articles



About the Author

Steve SjuggerudDr. Steve Sjuggerud runs his own investment advisory services called True Wealth and DailyWealth. True Wealth is one of the fastest-growing investment newsletters in the country, with more than 60,000 subscribers worldwide. DailyWealth is a free and, as you might have guessed, daily advisory service in the spirit of "Buy Low, Sell High." Steve received his Ph.D. in International Finance and has the "real world" experience that comes from having been vice president of a $50 million global mutual fund as well as an analyst, broker, offshore hedge fund manager and diligent world traveler.

See All Posts by This Author



The DailyWealth mission is to show you how to avoid risky investment, and how to avoid what the average investor is doing. We believe that you can make a lot of money and do it safely by simply doing the opposite of what is most popular.

See All Posts from This Publication