The old Wall Street adage is: Don’t try to catch the falling knife. From Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com:
History suggests being wary of the “strong buys” at $45 when the eventual bottom is $4.
In response to my chart-fest post The Rollercoaster Ride Ahead: 15 Years of Extreme Distortions Will Be Unwound, readers asked: OK, so what can I do in response? That’s the right question, for passively awaiting the wave to wash over us and then scrambling for higher ground is a high-risk strategy.
Let’s start with three stipulations: 1) this is not investment advice; everything here is an observation based on history or my personal experiences after previous bubbles have popped; 2) there are no easy answers–none, and 3) my last three books can be viewed as a trilogy describing macro and individual responses to the Great Unwinding. I’ll post links to the free chapters at the end of this post. The point being that I’ve pondered this question for many years.
Do I have all the answers? No. Nobody does. All we can assemble is a coherent response based on the lessons of history and system dynamics: what’s fragile, risky and undependable and what’s lower risk and more resilient.
Since no response is easy, we’re talking about degrees of difficulty and what’s within reach for each of us. We all have limits of experience, location, skills, capital, networks and so on. Therefore there is no “one size fits all” template that’s going to work for everyone. The whole point of my book on Self-Reliance is that we each have to plan our own responses; we can’t just follow somebody else’s plan.