From the category archives:

Peter Schiff

I recently downloaded a free copy of Peter Schiff’s Five Favorite Investment Choices, a short pdf e-book of five of his top stock picks – all of which were international dividend-paying stocks – most from Asia, if I recall, but the first pick was from Canada and was an oil and gas stock.
Background To Schiff’s [...]

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[N.B.: Dear Peter; as a regular listener of your weekly radio show and vlog, I wanted to say that I appreciate the work you've done.  Although not everyone may agree or even want to listen to what you have to say, I respect the consistency and logic of your arguments, which is quite refreshing admist [...]

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In this past week’s radio show, Peter Schiff seems to have taken a turn from his earlier, steadfast resistance to everyone’s recommendations and support he run for US Senate.  For the first time now, Schiff concedes that he might run for Senate and that he is considering it.  Sites like Peter Schiff for Senate 2010 [...]

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So, we’re finishing up the eighth straight week of the bear market rally of March-April 2009.  Everyone’s asking how long it will last.  Last week, Schiff mentioned the rally in passing, but this week he addressed it head on.  Simply put:

both some bears and some bulls are wrong going ahead
stocks are up in nominal [...]

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So, what’s the moral of the Peter Schiff story?  Buy commodities and foreign dividend-paying stocks.  And consider investing through his company Euro Pacific Capital (no, this is not a paid series of posts).
Now that I’ve finished reading the Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets, my sense now is that I’ve pretty much got [...]

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Well so far, I’m just about halfway through reading Schiff’s Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets.  I have to say (as I mentioned the other day to someone on Twitter) that I’m pleasantly surprised that not all of it is stuff that I’ve heard Schiff talk about before.  I was a bit concerned [...]

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In my last post I noted how Peter Schiff’s analysis has much in common with those other great economic critics out there – Mac Faber, Jim Rogers and Ron Paul.  Little am I surprised, then, to see these giant names in his book.  Marc Faber wrote the Foreword and the back cover blurbs are written [...]

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