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The Contrarian Litmus Test
By Porter Stansberry

December 09, 2006

I swear you could hear crickets chirping during my presentation at the New Orleans Investment Conference last month.

I first spoke at the New Orleans Conference in 1999. Nearly 4,000 people attended that year. Gary North was predicting the '99 conference would be the last, because, he said, Y2K would soon destroy our civilization.

He'd moved his family to a trailer park in Arkansas and, according to rumor, buried a brand new tractor inside a shipping crate in his front yard. (I showed him my ATM card... whose expiration date was "02." He didn't seem to realize the implication.)

At the time, I'd only barely launched my own small investment letter. No one had ever heard of me. But it didn't matter to the audience because I could speak intelligently about JDS Uniphase's erbium doped lasers and Lucent's latest AllWave fiber. I knew which railroad right-of-ways Level 3 was using to lay down its national fiber-optic network.

My speeches were packed. People swarmed me in the hallways. And many of my stocks went up hundreds of percent.

And yes, I certainly mistook a bull market for my own genius. Steve Sjuggerud tried, gently, to warn me about what would surely happen. But I thought the demand for bandwidth would continue to soar, solving all of the overcapacity problems.

It wasn't until the end of 2000 that I realized what was happening... and how severe the correction in stock prices would be. That was soon enough to avoid most of the carnage... but many folks didn't get out even then.

That's how I learned to be afraid of the "thundering herd." As my friend Rick Rule says about investing in the resource markets, you're either a contrarian or a victim. And right now, the contrarian move is to own housing stocks, telecom, and blue-chip stocks.

That's what I told the audience last month in New Orleans... and that's when the crickets started chirping. The room wasn't even half full during my workshop speeches.

I told the audience there's an easy, three-part litmus test in the stock market right now to judge your investing acumen and contrarian skills. "The first part of my test is housing stocks. If you've been buying housing stocks over the last month, you're a savvy and contrarian investor."

The room was completely silent. No one was interested... or they thought I was nuts. Or both.

The second part of the litmus test is blue-chip stocks. "Did you buy any of the blue chips I recommended this year?" I got a few nods this time, but not many. It was like giving a lecture on ancient Egyptian grammar at a sock hop.

The last part of my contrarian test concerns the new telecom boom. The share prices of even the most conservatively run telecom companies (such as Verizon) have been hammered, as investors have refused to return to the sector after a six-year bear market.

Contrarians, I argued, aren't buying uranium and oil anymore... they're buying housing stocks, cheap blue chips, and, most recently, telecoms. Nobody cared.

Honestly, that was fine with me. I know that means good things for my portfolio in the coming years. I passed the test.

Good investing,

Porter Stansberry

Editor's note: Porter Stansberry is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

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$363 Million

According to Institutional Investor, the average pay of the top 26 hedge-fund managers in 2005.

The Bull Run in Homebuiders
is Underway

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
December 4, 2006

I know that buying what's HATED, CHEAP, and JUST STARTING an uptrend works. Right now, homebuilders fit the bill perfectly. People just can't stand the idea of owning these stocks.

Read On…

A Boring... and Lucrative
Income Investment

By Matt Badiali
December 5, 2006

Pipelines are highly regulated, stable, boring industries. Pipeline company earnings are negotiated tariffs in a highly structured process. Once you understand those simple rules, you can buy a cheap company that will be a long-term dividend cash machine.

Read On…

There's An Automobile Craze Sweeping Across China
By Tom Dyson
December 6, 2006

Car sales in China have climbed 38% in the first three quarters of 2006. This year alone, automakers have sold more than 7 million cars in China. The question is: How do we profit from this craze?

Read On…

Record Low Interest Rates
Ahead in 2007

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
December 7, 2006

If you're banking on higher interest rates coming your way, you'd better change your thinking. The Bond King is predicting falling interest rates over the next 18 months...

Read On…

Unintended Consequences
of the Law

By Tom Dyson
December 8, 2006

Online gambling is illegal in the United States, yet 80% of the online poker industry's revenue was coming from American residents. So in September 2006, the United States government tried to kill the online poker industry.

Read On...

Two Dollar Cable

Three nonstop flights from Europe arrive daily to the Mall of America in Minnesota. The planes are loaded with holiday shoppers and strong currencies. Take the British pound, for example.

Currency traders call the pound/dollar exchange rate "cable." Cable is about to hit two dollars for the first time in my living memory. This means every British pound you have in your pocket is worth two dollars... and folks from Europe are getting fantastic deals in American stores.

For example, the New York Post reports a pair of women's designer jeans retails for £169 ($327) in the British department store Selfridges. Here in the U.S., the same pair of jeans sells for $143 (£73.80) at Bloomingdales.

This is the third attempt in the last 18 years cable has tried to reach two dollars. In late December 2004, it hit 1.95. And in 1992, right before George Soros attacked the pound and devalued it, cable hit 1.995.

But you have to go back to 1979 to find the last time cable hit two dollars. I bet it makes it this time.

-Tom Dyson

 

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