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Editor's Note: The following article discusses Robert Prechter's
view of investment vehicles and government-regulated plans. For more analysis
from Robert Prechter, download a free 10-page July issue of Prechter's Elliott
Wave Theorist.
It's a blessing and a curse. IRAs, 401(k)s, thrift plans -- some of the best
ways to save money for retirement (the blessing) can tie your hands when you
invest that money (the curse). Most savers didn't recognize the cursed side
as the markets generally trended up over the years, increasing their nest eggs'
earnings. But after a year like 2008, savers everywhere absorbed the shock
that they couldn't protect their retirement savings from a bear market. Now,
the real moment of truth arrives: EWI forecasts that the market will again
turn bearish. How can you protect what you've got when your plan doesn't have
any options for short-side investing? Bob Prechter addresses that question
in his most recent Theorist.
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Excerpted from The Elliott Wave Theorist, by Robert Prechter, published
August 5, 2009
Investment Vehicles and Government-Regulated Plans
We receive many emails from subscribers asking specific questions about investing
[such as,] "Is it O.K. to invest in such-and-such short fund if that is my
only short-side option?" Again, given the market-tracking mechanics of such
funds, the only answer we can give in good conscience is "no." ... But every
question prompts others. Why is this our friend's "only option"? The funds
mentioned are the only ones in which a "long" is really a short, so we would
guess that our friend has some sort of government-regulated retirement plan
that allows only "long-side" purchases.
Others with retirement plans similarly complain that their plans do not include
the option of owning Treasury-only paper and ask if such-and-such other money
fund is safe enough to buy. In our view, most money funds assuredly do not
offer the level of safety that we advocate. Moreover, such plans are often
administered by brokers, and brokers will be in chaos during wave 3 down.
These questions reveal just some of the problems an investor encounters when
playing the government's games. Conquer the Crash (see Ch. 23) recommended
taking every opportunity to cash out of IRAs, Keoughs, company-provided plans,
etc., all of which are government regulated, thereby freeing up your money
so that you would have full say over its use.
By signing up for one of the government's "deals," a potential short seller
now has no good choices and is therefore effectively barred from selling short.
A prudent investor who wants to own the safest debt may likewise be barred
from buying T-bills if he participates in a government-regulated, company retirement
plan. Should he buy the only money fund available and cross his fingers? Government
rules often force people into bad decisions. In this case, the "good deal" the
government engineered for your retirement is a trap that prohibits you -- at
the most important time in modern history -- from buying the safest debt instruments
and from making money in a bear market....
Irony attends both financial markets and government plans. Put them together
-- as we have witnessed throughout the financial crisis so far -- and you get
Kafka.
For more analysis from Robert Prechter, download a FREE 10-page July issue
of The
Elliott Wave Theorist. It challenges current recovery hype with hard
facts, independent analysis, and insightful charts. You'll find out why the
worst is NOT over and what you can do to safeguard your financial future.
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