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Steve's note: My friend Chris Weber has an incredible story... He's made so much money from his investments that he's never had a "real" job before. It's no wonder... I've never seen him be wrong on a major market call. I think reading his recent thoughts on the stock market are worth your time today...

What It Would Take for Me to Be a Major Buyer of Stocks
By Chris Weber
November 6, 2008

As much as I want to believe otherwise, I don't think the worst is over for global stock markets.

Yes, the week that just passed (October 27 to 31) was the best week for the Dow in 34 years. It rose by 10.5%. But what does this mean?


It means that not since the week ending October 11, 1974, has the Dow risen so much in percentage terms. But let me remind you that October 1974 was not the low of the terrible 1973-74 bear market. Yes, it rose by a massive 14.1% that week in 1974, and ended the week at 658.17. But in the weeks to come, this would prove to be just another bear market rally. It would fall, ultimately, to a closing low of 577.60 on December 6.

In fact, if we look at the best weeks ever on record for the Dow, we see that they were all bear market rallies. The week ending June 26, 1931, saw the Dow soar by 16.1%, its best ever. But the absolute low was still over a year away. In fact, except for that week in 1974 and last week, all of the best 15 weeks of the Dow took place in the 1930s, and most were bear market rallies.

To convince me the lows are really in, I'd like to see a couple things.

First, P/E ratios on the major index would have to be much lower. At great market bottoms of the past, they have been well under 10. And the dividend yield on the indices has been as high as 6% at great bottoms. Given current dividends on the Dow, it would have to go to around 5,300 in order to yield 6%.

I'm not predicting this will happen, because the Fed and other central banks are doing everything they can to inflate. But I realize they may not be successful...

So far, they have not been. Banks are still not lending and people are afraid to borrow. I fear to say this, but so far things are looking much like the beginning of the long Japanese deflation that began in the early 1990s and has still not ended. Just last week, the Japanese central bank once again cut interest rates to near zero and announced yet more spending programs. All of these programs and all of the printing of money since 1990 have not resulted in economic recovery. This is a sobering thought for the rest of the world.

For many of the countries now flirting with deflation, like the U.S., relatively few people have much in the way of savings. The idea that the average American family should have as little as eight months of expenses saved is greeted with laughter from most Americans.

"Who has that much?" many ask.

Yet I predict that – though it will be wrenching – Americans will be forced to save like they have not saved since the 1930s. This process will take years, and it may be the case that what has happened this year with both real estate and all other asset prices falling, we will see a new generation of savers in the U.S. and much of the world.
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I think this will be so even though we will see bargains in asset prices during the next few years. At some point, for instance, the world's stock markets will be great bargains. Yet most people will be too scared to buy into them, having been fooled too many times before.

So... while the market could rally strongly from here, I'm not risking much of my capital on it. My strategy is still to build cash, but to look for bargains. When the valuations I just cited appear, I'll be a big buyer of stocks.

Good investing,

Chris Weber

Editor's Note: Starting at 16, Chris Weber turned just $650 (earned from his paper route) into $1.8 million in cash through a series of remarkably insightful investments. Right now, Chris recommends staying away from most stocks – but one cash investment he likes right now is a savings account that's made him 1,700% over the years. For more details on this, click here.

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ANNALY CAPITAL: THIS WEEK'S "WOW" CHART

This week's "WOW" chart comes courtesy of Annaly Capital...

You can read Tuesday's essay for the full story on this stock. But the basic idea is this: Annaly borrows money at short-term rates and invests that money in government-guaranteed investments. It uses leverage to juice up its returns.

Annaly's corporate structure allows it to pass most of its profits on to shareholders in the form of double-digit dividends. And its safe strategy is a far cry from the stupid things that went on at Bear Stearns and Countrywide Financial.

But when the world freaks out like it did in October, it doesn't care for any loan or investment. That's why the market clobbered nearly every financial stock by at least 50% in 2008. Annaly, however, has held its lows... and is trading where it was one year ago.

One of the most bullish signs a stock can display is when it holds steady in the face of a terrible market and terrible news. Well, Annaly has spent the past year getting the kitchen sink, the refrigerator, and the oven thrown at it. It has shrugged it all off. An investor can only be impressed.

Annaly Capital Management, Inc.

Mortgage finance company Fannie Mae acknowledged Tuesday that it spent more than $6,000 on a golf outing after it was seized by the government earlier this year, but said it is halting similar company-sponsored events.

Dallas-Fort Worth area television station KTVT reported Monday night that Fannie paid for 20 golfers, including several company executives, to attend a Sept. 29 golf excursion in Texas. Fannie Mae, which did not dispute the report, described the event as a mortgage industry customer meeting held twice annually.

"We do regret that the activities surrounding the customer meetings in Dallas may be perceived as excessive," company spokesman Brian Faith said in an e-mail message.

The golf outing snafu comes after revelations last month that insurance giant American International Group Inc. (AIG, Fortune 500) spent $440,000 on a posh California retreat for its executives, days after the company tapped into an $85 billion government loan to stave off bankruptcy.

– Associated Press

The Federal Reserve recently hired someone to "assess the safety and soundness of domestic banking institutions."

The new employee has plenty of experience with unstable banks. Former Bear Stearns chief risk officer (from 2006 to 2008) Michael Alix will be senior adviser to William Rutledge, executive vice president of the bank supervision group. Prior to serving as chief risk officer, Alix ran credit-risk management for Bear from 1996 to 2006.

I am not making this up. The Fed hired the guy who let Bear go in the tank. WOW. It's just like George Carlin always said: The government is "stunningly full of bulls***."

– Dan Ferris
S&A Digest

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How to Let the World's Greatest Investors Make You Rich
November 1, 2008

Why Didn't Gold Soar?
October 31, 2008

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