Learn more

The Crowd Is About to Get Destroyed in Currency Trading

By Porter Stansberry
Saturday, February 27, 2010

Several weeks ago, I was invited to a client meeting in Miami held by the wealth-management firm AllianceBernstein.

Bernstein's investment research has long been regarded as the best on Wall Street.

Why? Bernstein does honest, thorough work because it doesn't engage in investment banking. It's paid to be right, not to sell retail clients down the river to pull off a public stock offering or sell a bond.

In Miami, the firm's head economist spoke about the dynamics of the global currency markets and explained AllianceBernstein's trading strategy. It borrows in four to six currencies with low interest rates and buys four to six currencies with higher interest rates. This diversified approach reduces risk substantially. And it has historically produced better average returns than the S&P 500 with less volatility.

The presentation was designed to entice wealthy U.S. investors to open leveraged foreign-exchange trading accounts with AllianceBernstein. And I must say, the presentation was among the most sophisticated I've ever seen. The economist really knew his stuff. But... I was deeply troubled by the presentation.

In my experience, whatever the big brokers are pitching to retail clients, that's the thing most likely to blow up next. One year it's dot-com stocks, one year it's mortgage backed securities, one year it's commodity futures, and so on...

I'd never seen a Wall Street firm give a leveraged currency presentation to retail clients before. While this kind of trading can be very profitable, it is extremely risky – especially right now.

For the first time since just after World War I, we have serious sovereign debt problems in all of the major currencies. And for the first time in the history of man... we have a global monetary base that's not anchored to any real asset.

In fact, the largest reserve assets of the world's monetary system are the obligations of a bankrupt nation (the U.S.) that must print money to afford its own annual deficits (read my essay on this here).

This is a recipe for disaster.

I believe the entire system of paper money – globally – is coming unglued. The result will be a kind of volatility and disruption to the global economy the world hasn't seen since World War I, when the gold standard ended in 1914.

Ironically... ignorant of these enormous risks... retail investors are running full speed ahead into foreign-exchange trading.

Deutsche Bank reports its currency trading platform for retail clients saw a 40% increase in customers during 2009. In the U.S., foreign-exchange volume was up 28% last year – almost entirely because of retail trading.

I suspect these numbers will continue to grow for a while, but I urge you to avoid this looming disaster. It will be devastating to unsophisticated traders who don't practice sound position sizing and don't use stop losses.

While trading foreign currencies has been a good strategy for a long time... what will happen to those strategies as volatility soars and the large currencies collapse? No one knows.

But one thing I do know for sure: It won't end well for retail investors. Someone has to hold the bag for all of the world's paper money. Who do you think will end up holding the bag? Retail investors... or giant institutions like AllianceBernstein?

My advice for anyone itching for a currency trade: Trade worthless paper dollars for gold bullion. Trade them for silver. Repeat as often as possible.

Good investing,

Porter Stansberry

P.S. I believe my prediction of a currency crisis will turn out to be right sooner than most anyone thinks possible. A global run on the dollar could happen at any moment. This is by far the most serious problem, because the dollar isn't just another major currency. It is the world's reserve currency, the foundation of the entire system.

I devoted the most recent issue of my investment advisory to this situation... including several easy ways to protect yourself and prosper in the event of a currency crisis. You can learn how to access this issue immediately right here.






AN ALL-TIME HIGH FOR GOLD

Another month goes by, and another new all-time high for gold. At least for Europeans...

Longtime DailyWealth readers know we encourage everyone to view the world the way a rich, global investor does: through several different "lenses."

One way to look at world currencies is through the "lens" of gold. This gives you insight into what's happening beyond your own borders.

For instance, gold, in dollar terms, is well off its December highs. But in terms of the plummeting euro, gold reached a fresh all-time high this month. Chris Weber's brilliant "Currency Trade of the Millennium" is playing out in grand fashion.

– Brian Hunt

classics recent articles
  • The Recession Is Most Certainly Over
    By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud Friday, February 26, 2010
    So the Fed artificially pushing interest rates too high is our signal a recession is coming. We're definitely not there yet. According to this indicator, the bigger risk going forward is a great boom, rather than a "double-dip" recession like many are calling for. 

  • The Price of This Commodity MUST Rise. It's Inevitable.
    By Chris Mayer Thursday, February 25, 2010
    The uranium price has to go up. If it doesn't, there is no incentive for producers to make more, and hence a lot of reactors are going to go without fuel. More importantly, it can go up.

  • Secretly Buying Cheap as Developers Go Bust
    By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud Wednesday, February 24, 2010
    There are three ways that investment can work out for you. 1) The original owner buys the property back from you, including the 20% penalty. So you collect $60,000. 2) After a year, you sell it at a profit. 3) If the owner doesn't buy it back and you don't want to sell it, you just keep it.

  • These Stocks Are Paying 17% Dividends
    By Tom Dyson Tuesday, February 23, 2010
    Virtual banks are generating extraordinary dividends at the moment. Annaly just paid out $0.75 per share. That's the largest quarterly dividend in its 13-year history... And based on yesterday's share price, it adds up to a 17% annual yield.

  • Tiny Oil Stock Making Mysterious 200% Jumps
    By Tom Dyson Monday, February 22, 2010
    According to the promotion, the U.S. Geological Survey has just announced an enormous oil discovery. The USGS says the discovery contains 503 billion barrels of oil, worth $37.7 trillion at current prices.