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Editor's Note: The following article is adapted from Robert Prechter's
2002 best-selling book, Conquer the Crash - You Can Survive and Prosper
in a Deflationary Depression.
In addition to this article, visit Elliott Wave International to download
the free
15-page report about how to protect yourself, you wealth and your family
in this environment. It contains details about what you should do with your
pension plan, valuable tips for business owners, insights on handling loans
and debt and important warnings against trusting the government to protect
you.
The ultimate effect of deflation is to reduce the supply of money and credit.
Your goal is to make sure that it doesn't reduce the supply of your money and
credit. The ultimate effect of depression is financial ruin. Your goal is to
make sure that it doesn't ruin you.
Many investment advisors speak as if making money by investing is easy. It's
not. What's easy is losing money, which is exactly what most investors do.
They might make money for a while, but they lose eventually. Just keeping what
you have over a lifetime of investing can be an achievement. That's what this
my book, Conquer the Crash, is designed to help you do, in perhaps the single
most difficult financial environment that exists.
Protecting your liquid wealth against a deflationary crash and depression
is pretty easy once you know what to do. Protecting your other assets and ensuring
your livelihood can be serious challenges. Knowing how to proceed used to be
the most difficult part of your task because almost no one writes about the
issue. My book remedies that situation.
Preparing To Take the Right Actions
In a crash and depression, we will see stocks going down 90 percent and more,
mutual funds collapsing, massive layoffs, high unemployment, corporate and
municipal bankruptcies, bank and insurance company failures and ultimately
financial and political crises. The average person, who has no inkling of the
risks in the financial system, will be shocked that such things could happen,
despite the fact that they have happened repeatedly throughout history.
Being unprepared will leave you vulnerable to a major disruption in your life.
Being prepared will allow you to make exceptional profits both in the crash
and in the ensuing recovery. For now, you should focus on making sure that
you do not become a zombie-eyed victim of the depression.
Taking the Right Actions
Countless advisors have touted "stocks only," "gold only," "diversification," a "balanced
portfolio" and other end-all solutions to the problem of attending to your
investments. These approaches are usually delusions. As I try to make clear
in Conquer the Crash, no investment strategy will provide stability forever.
You will have to be nimble enough to see major trends coming and make changes
accordingly.
The main goal of investing in a crash environment is safety. When deflation
looms, almost every investment category becomes associated with immense risks.
Most investors have no idea of these risks and will think you are a fool for
taking precautions.
Many readers will object to taking certain prudent actions because of the
presumed cost. For example: "I can't take a profit; I'll have to pay taxes!" My
reply is, if you don't want to pay taxes, well, you'll get your wish; your
profit will turn into a loss, and you won't have to pay any taxes. Or they
say, "I can't sell my stocks for cash; interest rates are only 2 percent!" My
reply is, if you can't abide a 2 percent annual gain, well, you'll get your
wish there, too; you'll have a 30 percent annual loss instead. Others say, "I
can't cash out my retirement plan; there's a penalty!" I reply, take your money
out before there is none to get. Then there is the venerable, "I can't sell
now; I'd be taking a loss!" I say no, you are recovering some capital that
you can put to better use. My advice always is, make the right move, and the
costs will take care of themselves.
If you are preoccupied with pedestrian concerns or blithely going along with
mainstream opinions, you need to wake up now, while there is still time, and
actively take charge of your personal finances. First you must make your capital,
your person and your family safe. Then you can explore options for making money
during the crash and especially after it's over.
For more information, Prechter has made five full chapters from his book available
for free download.
• What
to do with your pension plan
• How
to identify a safe haven (a safe place for your family)
• What
should you do if you run a business
• Calling
in loans and paying off debt
• Should
you rely on the government to protect you?
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