Mike's Content

How to Generate More Income in Your RRSP

Just before the RRSP contribution deadline, Mike interviews an income & dividend expert on two subjects:

1. Some specific ideas on investments that are solid long term holds producing consistent income.

2. Ensuring what you hold in your account is performing well – Robert Zurrer for Money Talks

 

 03:57 – 18:24 – Featured Guest Aaron Dunn of Keystone Financial

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Martin Armstrong: Cryptocurrency – Is There a Total Risk of Loss?

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Martin with a must read for any investor in crypto currencies. He includes an answer to the question of crypto currencies ability to drop to zero. Robert Zurrer for Money Talks

QUESTION: Vitalik Buterin (picture on the right), the co-founder of Ethereum and a co-founder of Bitcoin Magazine, said on Twitter. “Reminder: cryptocurrencies are still a new and hyper-volatile asset class, and could drop to near-zero at any time.” He said: “Don’t put in more money than you can afford to lose.”

Do you agree with him? It seems like you do.

LM

ANSWER: Absolutely! None of these currencies will ever make it to be a viable real-world currency. Anyone wh0 thinks that these will be safer than an official currency is not thinking clearly. We are moving toward an electronic currency since today only about 4% of transactions take place in and paper money. Nevertheless, those who think that this circumvents central banks etc and this is the future are really out there in the unrealistic world.

A currency has to be LEGAL TENDER as long as we have governments. That means it must be acceptable even by the government for taxes.  This cryptocurrency is not really a currency at all. It is simply a speculative investment. To be a real currency it must be used within society to conduct commerce. We cannot accept it for by the time we would go to convert it, who knows what the value would be. It is far too volatile.

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Cryptocurrencies are reminiscent of the Broken Banknote Era set in motion by Andrew Jackson when he closed the central bank. Every bank began to print their own currency and this led to massive fraud. Notes were circulating and people had no idea if it was real or a fraud. We cannot have 1,000 different cryptocurrencies all circulating and trying to become the one true currency.

In the end, still, only an official currency will survive. The governments of the world can easily just outlaw cryptocurrencies if they impinge upon their monopoly. For now, they are not a serious threat.

….also from Martin Armstrong:

Fraudster Tries to Sell $20 trillion of Bitcoin

The Most Popular 3 Articles This Week

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1. Rising Interest Rates & The Coming

   Banking Crisis

    by Martin Armstrong

Armstrong, who has been very accurate on rising interest rates, and he impact they are having on pensions and Europe says he sees another banking crisis coming just as the United States is looking at a new radical bank rescue policy. A policy that will effect depositors rather than taxpayers

….continue HERE

2. Your Moral & Intellectual Superiors

   by Michael Campbell

According to the Finance Minister the budget is going to be fair. Of course it will be, as long as eveyone shares Trudeau and Morneau’s opinion. Mike on one of the most divisive characteristics of our society

….read it all HERE

3.  Jack Crooks: The Next Big 8 Year Bull Market

The 3 charts below tell the story: Jack Crooks makes a powerful argument that the US Dollar has entered into a long-term bear market cycle which will trigger a massive BIG move in sold out commodities for the next 8 years

…read more HERE

Keystone DIY Stock Seminars ARE BACK in MARCH

DIYKey

Spring Workshop Dates

Toronto March 1st @ Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel 7-9pm

Calgary March 6th @ Sheraton Cavalier Calgary Hotel 7-9pm

Edmonton March 7th @ Varscona Hotel on Whyte 7-9pm

Kelowna March 8th @ Coast Capri Hotel 7-9pm

Victoria March 13th @ Coast Victoria Hotel & Marina by APA 7-9pm

Langley March 14th @ Sandman Signatures Hotel 7-9pm

Vancouver March 15th @ UBC Robson Square 7-9pm

Tickets – $29.95

CLICK HERE to REGISTER

A Permanent Plateau: Crypto Bubbles

As this analyst say’s “Most of the time, getting off the mountain is far more dangerous than the ascent”. For those who remember the tech crashes of 2000-2002 or the slump in 2007-2009, this article lays out the danger inherent in the latest bubble in crypto currencies. A quick look at the sophistication of the players immediately is chilling! – Robert Zurrer for Money Talks

iStock bitcoin 2014 03 24You think your facts are more valuable than my feelings. I’m tired of being told facts. Sometimes facts just don’t matter. Sometimes facts are not facts.” 

— Bobbie Sanders, Inaugural Attendee

One attendee said, “I think stock picking abilities are overrated. I’ve beaten the stock market for something like 6 years in a row. People in index funds are driving a VW while I’m in a Porsche” When asked how his returns fared versus the S&P, the investor said he really didn’t track numbers like that. 

— Shaun Rodriguez

The view from the top of bull markets is remarkably like that from the top of the Matterhorn. What begins in a slow ascent at the base becomes a near vertical cliff for the last quarter. Sitting at the apex one might be inclined to puff up a little bit about their climbing abilities. One thing climbers will tell you on a regular basis is that disaster usually happens when you lose that sense of risk. Studies show that 60-70% of accidents happen to climbers on the way down not on the way up. It’s often referred to as “hikers’ letdown”[1]. While the view from the top is great, the danger lies in getting cocky at the height of the climb.

Market Bubbles

I bring all this up because many investors are sitting smugly on top of their own investment Matterhorn – serenely looking down at those numbers that seem so small down below. If we follow our hiker’s advice, now is the time to utilize the most caution and avoid the 1000-foot fall into a market crevasse. Put another way, Ieyasu Tokugawa always said that after a victory one must tighten the helmet strap.

The funny things about market bubbles is you can’t put your finger on exactly when they start or even if you are in one at the time. Knowing you have been in one is a heckuva of a lot clearer. But I would proffer that in the later stages of a bubble there are some events that take place that really aren’t seen in less exuberant times. For instance:

 

  • At the height of the Japanese asset bubble in 1989, the value of the land underneath the Imperial Palace in Tokyo (roughly 280 acres) was worth the same as the entire acreage of California (roughly 100,000,000 acres).
  • Near the height of the technology bubble in 1999, there were 457 IPOs of which nearly 80% were technology companies. Of those, 117 doubled in price on their first day of trading.
  • In 1999, thirty of the top 50 stocks (by market size) on the Nasdaq exchange had prices that reflected estimated growth to be 35% for the next 50 years.

 

Cryptocurrencies: The Symptom or the Disease?

We all generally look back and wonder how we couldn’t see the bubble at the time. With 20/20 hindsight it looks so obvious. But we shouldn’t be so smug to think we can’t be fooled again. Take a look at some of the latest news surrounding cryptocurrencies.

 

  • Ripple (which owns XRP, a digital currency) rose to nearly $4 per share. This made its majority shareholder and CEO Chris Larsen’s net worth jump to roughly $60B – placing him number four on the Forbes 500 richest. The vast majority of this wealth has been generated over a period of roughly 180 days.
  • SkyPeople Juice International, a company that makes – wait for it, juice – renamed itself Future Fintech Group (NASDAQ:FTFT) and saw its stock jump by 280%.
  • Not to be outdone, Long Island Ice Tea (NASDAQ:LBCC) company changed its name to Long Blockchain and saw its share price jump by 600%. More than 15 million shares changed hands the day the name change was announced, compared with average daily volume of about 170,00 shares over the prior three months.
  • CNBC reports an ever-increasing amount of people are utilizing debt to purchase cryptocurrencies. In an interview Josh Fairfield says “People are maxing out their credit cards because they think it’s going to make them a lot of money,” said Fairfield. “They’ve been right enough that people are now making ever more risky investments in cryptocurrencies.”
  • Software developer Rishab Hegde launched a cryptocurrency he called Ponzicoin. The company described its offering as “the world’s first legitimate Ponzi scheme” and encouraged people to buy and then “shill this coin heavily to your family and friends like a fucking sociopath.” Owners of the company had to shut the site down after “things got crazy out of hand.

 

Watching the cryptocurrency craze sweep over Wall Street, Ben Carson wrote on his wonderful blog A Wealth of Common Sense, “Hundreds of billions of dollars in a currency have been created basically out of thin air over the past few months. This doesn’t seem normal.”

Indeed. It definitely doesn’t seem normal. Most of the aforementioned events lead me believe there is a great deal more speculation than investing in cryptocurrencies. But I’m not sure it stops there. With the major indices trading at levels not seen since the mid-1920s (!), one has to think long and hard whether stocks are currently in a bubble or not. Only one thing is certain: panics in cryptocurrencies, stocks, or tulip bulbs pop because of a lack of confidence. David Preiser says “Until 2008, people thought debt problems were confined to specific sectors. But when the bubble burst, ­trouble popped up in unexpected areas.” Financial complexity brings prosperity but also increased fragilitySince the Lehman collapse it’s been a long and slow recovery. But the underlying problem remains: The entire edifice is built on confidence, and that can evaporate pretty quickly. The next global crisis will stem from failure of confidence somewhere.” The recent drop in Bitcoin values would suggest many investors have lost confidence in their investments.

Conclusions

When I began writing this article, the town of Zermatt at the base of the Matterhorn was attempting to evacuate 13,000 tourists. The mountain received nearly 12 feet of snow in a matter of days triggering avalanche warnings. The obvious fear was the town would be swept away in an extraordinarily large avalanche. Thankfully it didn’t happen, but that didn’t mean officials didn’t take it seriously and prepare for the worst. If you are sitting atop your own investing Matterhorn be prepared for a bumpy descent down. Remember most climbers die on the way down not the way up. Ask any investor in technology stocks in 2000-2002 or financial stocks in 2007-2009 and most remember the ride down not the ride up. It is truly time to tighten the helmet strap.