Its been a tough two years for gold and silver investors. Even while the fundamentals for owning them have gotten even better ($85 billion per month of new money creation and annual US budget deficits of $1 Trillion.) the prices have been pummeled lower, almost certainly through intervention of central banks and/or their proxies. If you didn't buy prior to the start of this blog you have almost certainly sustained paper fiat currency losses. That can be frustrating for anyone. But the title of this blog relates to long term wealth preservation not short term trades. Sometimes wealth preservation means avoiding shorter term risks (an overvalued equity market) in favor of longer term investments that are more backed by fundamentals. That means giving up speculative gains for likely, longer term certainty and gains. Below, Rick Rule, who has been through more market cycles than I explains the wisdom he has acquired over the long term that made him a wealthy investor:
From
KWN:
Rule:
“You know, Eric, it’s funny because right now I am up in Vancouver, and
looking at the despair in the professional investment community and
juxtaposing that with the strange elation that I feel has caused me to
feel very contemplative.
One of the things that
occurs to me is that this is my fourth major market cycle. The three
previous down-cycles that I’ve been through previously were the cause of
my personal wealth, and Eric Sprott’s personal wealth....
“It’s interesting that at age 60 I have a
lot more patience than I did when I was age 30. And I think one of the
things that’s happening right now is the fact that markets and
conditions have caused me to be a 3-to-5-year thinker, and most of the
people I compete with, who are 20 years younger than me, have a
2-to-3-week time frame.
And the idea that somebody
who has a 2-to-3-week times frame can compete with somebody who has a
3-to-5-year time frame is very problematic. What Eric and I are trying
to do in very crass terms is go from being quite wealthy, to being
ludicrously wealthy.
But the reality is that we
are competing with people who are trying to make payments on their 2nd
house at Whistler. In other words we are competing with people who are
trying to live rich as opposed to being rich, which constrains them to a
very, very short time frame.
Certainly I feel bad about
having paid $3 for some stock that is selling at 60 cents, but it’s not
the first time I’ve ever done that, and it’s certainly not the last time
I am going to do that. But what I can tell you is that the money I’ve
made in my life has come about through the aggressive deployment of
capital at times like these.
This is the case even
though I may lose more capital in some of these, but also understanding
the incredible increase in value that one gets by maintaining a 2-year,
3-year or a 5-year time frame in markets where your competition is so
despairing that they are worried about how they are going to get through
month-end.”
Eric King: “Rick, is this one of the greatest opportunities you’ve ever seen in your entire career?”
Rule: “I
think so. This is my fourth major downturn, and in the first one I was
really terrified because I hadn’t been through it before. But in the
last three downturns I have known in every case that bear markets cause
bull markets and that I was going to come out of it doing very well. I
just didn’t know how well or how long it was going to take.
I need to tell you that in
each prior instance that I came out of it doing much better than I
anticipated, and this time I believe that I am going to do incredibly
well coming out of this market. Your readers need to remember that
neither want nor hope are investment techniques, they are emotions. KWN
readers need to think as opposed to wanting or hoping. And if they do
that, and they lengthen their time frames, they will do much, much
better with their portfolios as this market turns and heads to the
upside.”
Rule also added:
“We need to remind ourselves, Eric, that the narrative with regards to
precious metals has not changed between 2010 and today. The only thing
that has changed is the price.