Personal Finance
What are investors to do as stocks sit near their 5-year highs?
There are plenty of pundits out there that’ll give you tons of reasons to buy or sell.
But perhaps now is the perfect time to step back and consider the sage advice of history’s most successful investors.
We’ve collected some of the finest wisdom on markets from the most respected and successful investors, past and present.


Home sales from Los Angeles to Charleston, South Carolina that are priced at more than $1 million are gaining at triple the pace of the broader market, according to real estate research firm DataQuick Inc. Wealthy purchasers, helped by gains in equities, are diving into real estate a year after a recovery began in the housing market when less well-heeled buyers rushed to take advantage of record-low interest rates, said Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School in Pennsylvania.
….read more HERE

Mike comes up with a great alternative to Vision Vancouvers plan to spend 6 million tax dollars on a bike sharing business.
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The Hangzhou Public Bicycle programme in China, shown on the left is the second largest bicycle sharing system in the world. The Vélib’ in Paris (on the right) is the largest bikesharing programme outside of China. Click HERE to read all that Wikipedia has to say about Bike Sharing.

Take Your Money out of the Stock Market
“I don’t think there is a lot of upside potential, but I think there is considerable downside,” he said.
However, he said that markets are now seeing emerging markets and their currencies go lower, and “It could be that all the money in the world flows in to U.S. stocks and avoids emerging markets.”
– in a recent interview with Yahoo Finance
The Fed Will Increase QE
Marc Faber was characteristically pessimistic during his interview with Sprott Money late last month.
“I don’t think they will end QE. I rather think they will have to increase it, because as you print money or as you purchase assets, from a central banking point of view, it loses its impact over time. In order to keep the impact going, you have to essentially increase it. I believe that the dovish members of the Fed will print more money. Especially after the resignation of Mr. Bernanke early next year, when he will be replaced, there will be even more dovish members.”
Bernanke will retire in January 2014. Former White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers and Federal Reserve vice chair Janet Yellen, a strong dove, are considered the leading contenders.
A check through Google suggests the media, both large and small, seem to overwhelmingly favor Yellen. “Her notable achievement,” explains Steve Chapman in Reason magazine, “has been to assess the dangers faced by the Fed and to distinguish the real from the bogus. Since the financial meltdown of 2008, Bernanke’s critics have been haunted by the specter of inflation. Yellen has seen it for the illusion it is.”
Faber, naturally, is no Janet Yellen fan. “As far as the eye can see, interest rates under Bernanke will stay at zero and below,” he said during an interview with Kitco News in 2010. “Janet Yellen, another totally ignorant economist removed from any reality, said herself six months ago, ‘If I could implement interest rates below zero, I would do it.’ So now you know what the policy in the U.S. will be.”
He was, of course, correct. In the last three years, easy money has been the rule. It is expected to remain unchanged for at least the next year.
While many in the media are focused on Yellen’s gender (and Summers’ history with the president), there is a much more compelling reason that the Obama administration will pick her: Yellen is an easy money disciple. As Faber predicts, she is the more likely candidate to keep the money flowing for years to come. As we noted on July 29 , Summers is much more likely to let the market take its medicine. His bias will almost certainly tip the scales in favor of Yellen.
Faber will likely be right again. Don’t expect easy money to end with Chairman Bernanke’s reign.
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Pickup truck sales are still picking up.
In July, Ford saw a year over year increase of 22 percent, Ram 31 percent, Chevrolet 46 percent and GMC a whopping 49 percent.
Factors including a stable economy, accelerating investments by businesses and an aging truck fleet are combining to produce incredible growth in the segment.
Ford’s head of sales, Ken Czubay, estimated last week that there are over 14 million pickups currently on the road that are more than 11 years old, and there are millions more in need of replacement.
But don’t expect to get a deal on too many of them when they hit the local auto auction.
According to a report from Pickuptrucks.com, used pickup truck prices have increased up to 15 to 20 percent in the past year, even as average used car prices have been trending downward.
The strong demand for trucks less than five years old, in particular, has been driving up their value as average new pickup truck transaction prices are now above $40,000.
Test Drive: The $300,000 pickup truck
