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Weekend Edition
The Best of The S&A Digest
July 25, 2009

It was about 10 years ago. I was traveling in China with Doug Casey and a handful of other very wealthy folks. We were discussing tech stocks – which were booming at the time. I was talking about Qualcomm's technology or JDS Uniphase's lasers or something, when Doug interrupted me. "Oh, I never buy stocks on the open market. I'm not interested in a fair deal. I only put my money into situations that are distinctly unfair – unfair for the other guy... "

It was a valuable lesson. Rich people don't invest like you and me. They don't buy mutual funds, that's for certain. They don't buy stocks either (at least not on the open market), which might surprise you. So what do they buy?

Let's look at the recent deal to save CIT. Six wealthy bondholders of CIT, including PIMCO and hedge fund Baupost Group, put up $2 billion in financing to save the company this week. What did they get? Not merely shares. CIT agreed to pay a 5% upfront fee – that's $100 million profit overnight – and annual interest of at least 13%. In addition, the company pledged assets worth more than five times the amount of the loan as collateral.

As Doug taught me: Why take a risk when you don't have to?

Back in 1998, Casey was going a little nuts... or so I thought. He was telling me to buy all of these uranium stocks – most of which traded for pennies. I thought to myself, no one has built a new nuclear reactor since the early 1970s. Why would there be a sudden surge in uranium prices?

But Doug kept telling me nuclear power is the only way to provide anything like the amount of power the world is going to need as places like India and China come on line. The chart of just one of the many uranium stocks Doug was telling me to buy is below. Many others went up even more than this one.

Cameco Corp.

Today, I think Doug has gone a little nuts again. What is he saying now? Buy bullets and cigs. No kidding.

They keep raising the taxes on cigarettes – a pack now costs $10 in some places in the U.S., that's 50 cents per individual cigarette. If you're American and are going to be storing things, you probably can't go wrong building a stash of cigarettes. Even if you don't smoke – or perhaps especially if you don't smoke – every time you return to the U.S., you should buy the maximum amount of duty-free cigarettes allowed and store them.

The other thing Americans should do is buy a lot of shotgun shells, 9mm, .45, .223, and .308 ammo. Even if you don't shoot, you can set those aside and store them too, because they're going to be taxed and regulated to the nth degree. And properly stored, they keep for a very long time.

In fact, anything regulated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms – one of the most corrupt, dangerous, and useless of all federal bureaucracies – is likely to go up considerably in both price and value. It's perverse that the U.S. has a bureaucracy to regulate the three things you need for a hunting trip or a good party.


Doug has been like a second father to me – or a rich uncle. And while building a lifelong friendship with Casey himself probably isn't in the cards for most of our subscribers, you do have a simple (and free) way to get his personal views on the world.

For years, I've been urging Doug to simply put his best thoughts down in print each week, so more of his wisdom can reach people. But... like most folks who are worth millions of dollars and who have been to more than 170 different countries... Doug doesn't feel the need to earn another dollar or impress anyone.

So when I got together with Doug last May at a conference I hosted on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, I told him, "Look, just have your publisher call you once a week and ask you a few questions about what's going on in the world – like I do when we talk. You can have a company record and transcribe the conversation. You won't have to do anything you don't enjoy doing... "

That's exactly what they've done. Now, each Wednesday, I get an e-mail from Doug called Conversations with Casey. It's simply Doug talking about whatever is on his mind. That wouldn't be very interesting coming from most people. From Doug, it's pure gold. You can sign up to get Conversations with Casey here. It's free.

Regards,

Porter Stansberry

Stansberry & Associates produces the daily S&A Digest, which comes free with a subscription to one of our premium products. To learn more about a risk-free trial subscription click here.


S&P 500
   

Intuitive Surgical

ISRG

+37.34%

Gannett

GCI

+24.56%

Dow Chemical

DOW

+22.02%


Countries
   

Russia

RSX

+11.61%

Hong Kong

EWH

+7.23%

China

FXI

+6.91%


Sectors
   

Biotech

PBE

+15.32%

Homebuilding

ITB

+8.81%

Real Estate

IYR

+6.69%


Commodities
   

Gasoline

-

+10.26%

Heating Oil

-

+9.74%

Zinc

-

+9.58%

Advertisement

S&P 500
   

Lexmark

LXK

-18.68%

Allegheny Tech

ATI

-14.53%

Regions Financial

RF

-13.27%


Countries
   

Chile

CH

+3.21%

Taiwan

EWT

+3.37%

Ireland

IRL

+3.71%


Sectors
   

Defense

PPA

+1.48%

Food

PBJ

+1.65%

Consumer Staples

IYK

+2.83%


Commodities
   

Lean Hogs

-

-6.74%

Cotton

-

-2.74%

Natural Gas

-

-2.70%

Source: Bloomberg, Yahoo, StockCharts, XLQ 7/16–7/25.

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July 21, 2009

How to Short a Stock
July 20, 2009

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