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In October 2008, during the market's darkest days of fear and uncertainty, Warren Buffett sent a bullish op-ed piece to the New York Times arguing in favor of U.S. stocks. Those reassuring comments helped quell anxiety far more than any government intervention.
Of course, Buffett was putting his money where his mouth was. Ever the opportunist, he took advantage of the panic-driven sell-off by putting Berkshire Hathaway's mountainous cash stockpile to work. And with a limitless array of investment options, what was at the very top of his shopping list?
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In October 2008, during the market's darkest days of fear and uncertainty, Warren Buffett sent a bullish op-ed piece to the New York Times arguing in favor of U.S. stocks. Those reassuring comments helped quell anxiety far more than any government intervention.
Of course, Buffett was putting his money where his mouth was. Ever the opportunist, he took advantage of the panic-driven sell-off by putting Berkshire Hathaway's mountainous cash stockpile to work. And with a limitless array of investment options, what was at the very top of his shopping list?
Click here to subscribe now and gain access to this report!
Interest in gold picks up any time there is even a whiff of inflation or macroeconomic instability. And given the unprecedented turmoil and systemic breakdown of the financial system, it comes as no surprise that millions of everyday investors are turning to gold as a safe-haven hedge against the unknown.
Keep in mind, even at recent prices, gold is still sitting at just half the level reached during the last boom in the early 1980s -- when it spiked to $2,186 in today's dollars.
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India is home to 1.2 billion citizens, second only to China as the world's most populous nation. Many of its people still eke out a marginal, agrarian lifestyle. But more than 300 million Indians are skilled workers that have graduated to the ranks of the middle and upper classes.
That's a deep and growing pool of consumers -- greater than the populations of Japan, Mexico and the United Kingdom combined. And for the first time, many have surplus income at their disposal for goods and services that may have once seemed extravagant.
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I'm fortunate to be in the position of upgrading to a larger home, something many others sadly can't do at the moment.
But my decision to take out a much larger mortgage has nothing to do with keeping up with the Joneses (or even to minimize the squabbling among my three young sons).
No, this decision is largely a leveraged bet on inflation.
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You've probably heard a lot of talk about gold lately -- and for good reason. Gold is an indisputably reliable hedge against economic uncertainty. And given the unsteady dollar and ripe conditions for runaway inflation, it's no surprise that spot prices have ascended to record levels.
But you may be surprised to know that silver has actually surged more than +60% -- climbing almost twice the rate of its yellow sibling. Yet, silver can still be had for just 1/60th the price of gold, a ratio well beyond historical norms.
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China's rapid economic expansion and rise to power has been nothing short of phenomenal.
It took England nearly two centuries to double its GDP following the Industrial Revolution. The U.S. later managed to accomplish the same feat in about 50 years. China has somehow doubled its output in the span of a single decade.
But the real growth story, domestic consumption, is still largely untapped. China is home to more than 1.3 billion citizens, about one-sixth of the world's population. More than 500 million of those belong to an urban middle class with rising disposable income and a growing thirst for Western goods.
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