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Wisdom From the Back of a Taxicab
by Tom Dyson
February 16, 2006

In the race to keep ahead of the herd, taxi drivers are the speculator’s best friend.

Taxi drivers talk to people in every walk of life. Drivers who cover the airport route have an unbeatable perspective. If you want to know the true economic condition of a place, ask a cabdriver.

The taxi driver that picked me up in Baltimore last week was a fountain of knowledge.

This man spent 23 years running an import/export business in New Jersey.

When someone tells me they’re in the “import/export business,” I immediately assume they’re a smuggler of some sort – dealing in illegal goods or evading taxes.

Truth be told, that makes me more interested… criminals are often the sharpest entrepreneurs on the block and I love hearing their stories.

Mr. Gupta dealt in consumer electronics. He acted as a middleman between wholesalers in several different countries. From his small warehouse, he’d receive and make shipments from all over the world.

In the beginning, the money came easy. He could make $1,000 on a $50,000 shipment; he’d try to make two shipments a week. There was little competition.

He told me about good times in the 1980s – how he’d sell Japanese-made products back to the Japanese!

Exchange rates made this racket possible. Between 1984 and 1986, the yen moved from 270 to 120. It happened so fast that suddenly American retailers could get a better price for their Japanese-made goods by selling them back to Japan.

Mr. Gupta used the example of a cordless phone made by Panasonic. What Panasonic sold to Radio Shack for $100 a unit in 1984, could be re-sold back to the Japanese consumer for $350 in 1986. If Radio Shack had any unsold units of this phone in inventory, why would it sell them for $120 to a customer in America, when a Japanese consumer would pay $350?

So that’s what Gupta did. He bought all the Japanese equipment he could from US wholesalers and sold it in Japan. He said the margin was big enough that five middlemen could take a cut, and the end consumer in Japan would still get a cheap phone.

He started his business with just $10,000. At its peak, his business was worth over a million dollars and he owned a $400,000 house in the New Jersey countryside.

Then disaster struck… it happened four years ago… he got screwed by a customer. He’d shipped $250,000 worth of merchandise to a guy in Belgium. He’d been dealing with him for over eight years.

Gupta sunk all his free cash flow into this deal. He never got anything back. No merchandise, no money. The guy simply vanished.

He lost everything on the deal. He couldn’t meet the mortgage payments on his house, so the bank auctioned it off well below the true market value. He lost his equity.

"In today’s market, the house would sell for around $700,000," he said.

His wife suffered a stroke, as a direct result of his financial belly flop… and she’s still very sick. They moved to Baltimore, where rent’s cheaper. He took a job as a cab driver. Now he works 18 hours a day, 7 days a week in his cab to meet the bills.

He blamed increased competition for his bankruptcy. He’d been forced to take bigger risks to make the bacon – like making shipments on credit.

I wanted to know what a man with his experience thought of the current economy.

"The economy is bad at the moment," he told me. Business is hard. Three years ago, his cab would make $600 or $700 a weekend. Now it’s more like $400. No one goes out anymore.

"It’s not just the cab business either," he said. He thought about starting a business in the fast food industry. But he has friends in the restaurant business. “They are struggling to make ends meet,” he sighed. “It used to be easy but nobody’s spending anymore.”

I challenged him. I pointed out that the papers and the stock market tell a different situation… that things are improving, that times are better.

“Bulls**t.” He said.

Is Gupta’s depressing view of the economy correct? Or should we all invest with robust employment numbers and retail sales guiding us?

As usual, the right answer is probably somewhere in between.

Good investing,

Tom Dyson

Editor's note: Tom Dyson 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.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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Google (GOOG) is down 27% from its high… Yahoo! (YHOO) down 25%… Intel (INTC) down 22%. The biggest stocks in technology haven’t been treating their investors well lately. We even know of one individual investor who has lost over $40,000 from Google’s recent fall.

There is a way to profit from the downturn of these stocks. Jeff Clark, a veteran trader from San Francisco has been doing it for 20 years.

For instance, recently Amazon, the online bookseller, fell 13% in just two days. Jeff recommended an options play on the stock. His recommendation netted a 135% return in 21 days. That's the multiplying power of leverage. That's the power of options.

Amazon’s nasty fall (one-year chart):

 


“Earlier presidential involvement might have resulted in a more effective response.”

-Conclusion of the 520 page Congressional report on
Hurricane Katrina

“In 2005, Germans pulled $4.08 billion out of German real-estate funds, according to German funds association BVI.

‘For a long time, German real estate has been the most expensive real estate in Europe,’ says Mr. Martin of Curzon Global, which has bought $1.2 billion of German retail properties in the past 18 months. ‘That's now flipped around.’

German prices are falling as those in most other parts of the world have surged. Investors say they are seeing higher returns there than in other major markets. One measure for comparing relative returns across markets is "initial yield" -- the income a property generates, minus expenses. Buyers in London and New York City are accepting initial yields as low as 4%, while in German markets they can earn nearly 7%, Mr. Martin says.”

-The Wall Street Journal

“World number-one miner BHP Billiton reported a 48 percent leap in first-half profit on strong demand for minerals and unveiled a $2 billion share buyback.

The profit rise highlighted hefty global sales of iron ore, coal, industrial metals and oil and gas -- boosted by demand from China, which generated 16 percent of revenues -- and set the course for annual profits of more than $9 billion.”

-Reuters

THE WIRELESS ROLLER COASTER

During 1999, wireless communication specialist Qualcomm (QCOM) enjoyed one of the greatest years a stock ever had… rising over 2000%.

This ride on the tech bubble created many instant millionaires… and then took much of the money away when the stock fell 80% during the crash.

The boom in wireless technology has put Qualcomm back on top. It is one of the few large cap tech stocks that hasn’t suffered a big drop in the past month.

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