Originally posted by bobola
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I am not one of the brightest lights here, but to your question above, your conclusion seems correct based on my probably having seen the same reports you've seen about the contribution of consuming spending to the economy.
Perhaps Jim Rogers, the investor, is the smartest guy of whom I know. If he's telling the truth, and no doubt he is smarter than the average non-professional investor, then his answer to what lies ahead as he apparently sees it unfolding is to have gotten the hell out of the US and the dollar.
I don't think that is an answer for most people realistically, but perhaps the best one can do if you think the facts as you can understand them suggest on-going inflation, then do those things with your money that willl hopefully preserve its purchasing power for necessities. Shit, no one knows exactly what lies ahead or at what speed some possible scenario will unfold, but if you believe the inflation arguments and if you believe that bear markets follow bull markets, then for myself I think being seriouosly long in the equity markets right now is not where I wish to be--and not infrequently am I wrong.
Probably no one wants to get into your private business, but if you wish serious opinions that may be in here somewhere from iTulipers, put up your "conservative mutual funds'" symbols for anyone willing to look and see how they are allocated, and then you might get some sort of decent opinion.
Currently I am short the equity indices via etf's (dXd, SDS, TWM, QID) and also real estate and financials (SRS, SKF). I am long FXF, FXY, MEAFX, and CNY (currency plays). I am long gold and silver and some Agricultural ETFs or N's DBA, RJA, and RJZ (metals: 2/3 base, 1/3 PM's), and short oil, but that position is about to reach $0.00 in value. I even bot 18K of physical PM's recently. I am long interest rates on 30-year Treasury bonds, and long equities via hedged mutual fund HSGFX, otherwise still ~30% in cash. I would like to have less cash and more in the short ETF's if I can figure out the indices are likely headed lower. Sorry I don't have my percentage allocations at hand.
If you don't like the information someone is giving you, then change information sources--ie, get another broker. As you know it is you who is ultimately responsible for managing your wealth--not your broker or your shrewd tax guy.

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