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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 414.48+0.7%Jan 9 4:00 PM EST

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To: 2MAR$ who wrote (75026)6/9/2011 1:09:31 AM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (1) of 219180
 
Well our same Jim Rogers making a splash today again , interviewed on the "Closing Bell" with Maria ...still staunchly voicing loudly the risks of debts , current fiat policy and costs of running the US war machine .

US Is Nearing Even Worse Financial Crisis: Jim Rogers
Published: Wednesday, 8 Jun 2011 | 5:16 PM ET
cnbc.com

The U.S. is approaching a financial crisis worse than 2008, Jim Rogers, chief executive, Rogers Holdings, warned CNBC Wednesday.

"The debts that are in this country are skyrocketing," he said. "In the last three years the government has spent staggering amounts of money and the Federal Reserve is taking on staggering amounts of debt.

"When the problems arise next time…what are they going to do? They can’t quadruple the debt again. They cannot print that much more money. It’s gonna be worse the next time around."

The well-known investor believes the government won't shut down in August if agreement isn't reached on raising the debt ceiling, but he did say "draconian cuts" are needed in taxes and spending, especially military spending.

"We’ve got troops in 150 countries around the world. They’re not doing us any good, they’re making enemies. They’re costing us a fortune," he said.

Rogers said he is "not long anything in the U.S." and short on American tech stocks. He owns Chinese stocks as well as commodities and would love the world price of silver and gold to come down so he could "pick up the phone and buy more."

He said he owns Chinese stocks, currencies and commodities, adding the Chinese yuan will be a safer currency than the dollar.

"The U.S. is the largest debtor nation in the history of the world," he said. "The debts are going through the roof. Would you keep lending money to somebody who's spending money and not doing anything about it? No you wouldn't."

The pound sterling lost 90% of its value when it was no longer the world's reserve currency, he said, and the dollar will, too. In keeping with his philosophy he said he owns the U.S. dollar and is waiting for a rally. "If it doesn't happen I'll have to sell and take my losses."

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He called Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke a "disaster" who has "never been right about anything" since he's been in Washington. "I hope he doesn't come back with QE3 but that's all he knows. The only thing he knows is to print money."

He predicted that after the Fed ends its quantitative easing program, known as QE2, this month, it may come back under another name.

"They're gonna bring it back because [Bernanke will] be terrified and Washington will be terrified," he said. "There's an election coming in November 2012. Washington's gonna print more money."

The best defense against central banks, such as the ones in the U.S. and Japan, that Rogers said print money, is holding real assets, such as silver, rice or other commodities.

Rogers said he was long commodities and currencies and short emerging markets and U.S. tech stocks. He also holds silver; if gold goes down, buy gold, Rogers said in an interview with CNBC.

Meanwhile, the best way to latch onto Chinese growth is to invest in commodities, yuan and Chinese stocks.

He expects the Fed's latest round of asset purchases, dubbed quantitative easing, or QEII, to expire as expected this month. But another round could be around the corner, he said.

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