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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maple MAGA who wrote (162956)9/25/2020 6:30:18 PM
From: Maurice Winn1 Recommendation

Recommended By
3bar

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218079
 
bwahahaha... it is me. I have no idea if the Masons, Catholics or Protestants are behind it. I doubt the Jews are behind it, their goal seems to be independence from being molested by Masons, Catholics and Protestants.


My father also favoured one world government and he spent 4 years of his life and risked my life and my descendants' lives living in tents and being shot at by conquering Germans. Wars are an inadequate way to resolve global commons and border relationships. Fortunately my father's team won.

While it's true that the population explosion has continued in many regions, much of the world has reached Peak People so no longer needs genocidal Malthusian wars to keep populations down and generate tribal success.

The Arabian Nights shifting sands of national and tribal conflict is so last century as a way of organizing property rights.

We really do need to make atomic bombs obsolete.

And we have the means to do so.

Tradable Citizenship would be a good start and a necessary though not sufficient condition.

The problem is that bossy bastards want to take over and create a vast kleptocracy like the European Union, USA and current United Nations. What's needed is a system more like Berkshire Hathaway which has a tiny head office and leaves businesses to run themselves.

When people can vote to take opm democracy goes bung as has been shown around the world.

Hooray for One World Government. Protect the air, oceans, radio spectrum, and other commons.

Mqurice



To: Maple MAGA who wrote (162956)9/25/2020 7:32:59 PM
From: Gib Bogle1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218079
 
Others may, but I will not waste my time reading anything Ayn Rand wrote.



To: Maple MAGA who wrote (162956)9/25/2020 9:41:40 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
arun gera

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218079
 
Re <<Armstrong is a nut and a convicted felon>>

I have read Armstrong since 1991, and yes, eccentric, and perhaps nutty

He pleaded guilty after exhaustion, and in order to save his daughter's legacy before officials exhausted that.

He was deep-stated.

I can understand his non-responsiveness, ala 'convict me if you can, but do not ask me where my gold is', and also, oddly, other than the governments, none in the private world complained about Armstrong, as far as I am aware.

wsj.com

Armstrong's Visions of Business Glory Collapse in Securities-Fraud Indictment

By Jathon Sapsford, Peter A. McKay Mitchell Pacelle , and Bill Spindle of The Wall Street Journal .
Sept. 15, 1999 1:04 pm ET
For decades, Martin A. Armstrong sold himself to investors as expert on anything of precious value, from coins minted by the Egyptian pharaohs to turn-of-the-century U.S. stamps, not to mention current-day markets for stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies.

Now, Mr. Armstrong, arrested in New York on Monday, stands accused in a federal indictment of using this market-wizard image to conduct one of the most common frauds in the history of finance: making big promises to investors that he couldn't deliver. Mr. Armstrong, out on $5 million bail, finds himself accused of securities fraud after allegedly trying to cover up millions of dollars in bets on the yen and other markets that went horribly wrong.

It is certainly not the outcome that the 49-year-old Mr. Armstrong envisioned when he fell in love with business as a boy. It was a love that turned him into an active stamp dealer at just 13 years old, only to be kicked out of the stamp world's most elite fraternity as a young man in 1972 amid accusations of selling extremely rare stamps that he didn't own and couldn't deliver.

Undaunted, he fought back and became a stamps authority -- and eventually an authority on the far-more-sophisticated financial markets on which he was widely quoted. The self-confident forecasting style made him a hit in Japan, where Mr. Armstrong is now accused of bilking investors out of $950 million.

U.S. authorities accuse Mr. Armstrong of using his two companies, advisory firm Princeton Economics International Ltd. -- which has nothing to do with Princeton University but merely is based, like the university, in Princeton, N.J. -- and brokerage firm Cresvale International Ltd. of Asia, to sell Japanese investors securities with the promise of hefty returns.

Documents he used to sell his investments show that he promised buyers of his securities that a yield of 4% was guaranteed on the fixed-rate instrument, a strong selling point in a country where interest rates on government bonds are less than half that. Moreover, the securities were designed to offer further returns as high as 25%, depending on market conditions.

But one of the most controversial products he offered, according to officials in Tokyo, promised corporations that they could earn back the paper losses that have been sitting on their books since the crash in Japanese asset values earlier this decade. Mr. Armstrong held repeated conferences over the past four years at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, in which hundreds of Japanese corporate chieftans heard his market views; the talks whipped up interest in his products.

As proof of his acumen, he showed investors the returns he had delivered to earlier investors in his securities. He had delivered these returns, he told investors, by moving money around the world in a series of investments in stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities. What he didn't tell investors, federal prosecutors say, was that in recent months, the performance he boasted of was false.

Mr. Armstrong's bets on the markets increasingly began turning against him. The Securities and Exchange Commission says that from late 1997, Mr. Armstrong began to rack up increasingly big losses on large investments he made in currencies and options. Between November 1997 and August 1999, for example, SEC officials say Mr. Armstrong lost $295 million in trading the yen alone -- all money that belonged to clients. "In the wake of the discovery of the fraud," the SEC said in its civil complaint filed Monday, "Armstrong has transferred millions of dollars from Princeton Global accounts into foreign-bank accounts he controls." SEC officials declined Tuesday to disclose how much money Mr. Armstrong allegedly transferred overseas, or to what countries.

Officials at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which brought their own civil action against Mr. Armstrong, along with the SEC's, say Mr. Armstrong was trading in yen, crude-oil and precious-metals futures from a trading account segregated from various customer subaccounts. In August, he pulled money from the individual accounts to cover losses in the trading pool, says Daniel Nathan, CFTC deputy enforcement director.

"To the extent that the trading losses were passed along, the value of the individual collateral accounts was vastly overstated," says Mr. Nathan.

Yet all during the time when his alleged misdeeds took place, Mr. Armstrong continued to confidently sell himself as a forecaster of market trends, often in language in which he mocked others' mistakes. "The hedge-fund community has suffered huge losses this year in their futile attempt to sell the dollar against the Japanese yen," Mr. Armstrong wrote on his Web site ( www.pei-intl.com ) on May 13, 1999. "The old fundamentals must simply be thrown out the window."

The Japanese ate it up -- to their later regret. More than 80 Japanese companies are owed money by Mr. Armstrong, and whether they will ever be repaid is now in doubt. "He was very famous and his investment theory was coherent," said Kohichi Kiuchi, head of the accounting division at Amada Co., which invested in Princeton products. "But now, my impression on him is totally different."

What gave these investments added cachet was the fact that an official at the securities unit of Republic New York Corp., serving as custodian for Mr. Armstrong's trading accounts, issued letters that appeared to confirm huge profits on earlier investments. Mr. Armstrong, in turn, passed those letters on to Japanese clients as evidence of the huge returns on his products.

Attorneys for Republic told investigators that the head of the securities unit's futures division, William Rogers, based his confirmation of net asset values simply on Mr. Armstrong's instructions. Mr. Rogers "did not generally confirm the accuracy of the confirmation letters" by checking the accounts, according to the criminal complaint filed by federal prosecutors in New York. Mr. Rogers, one of two Republic employees suspended over the matter, couldn't be reached for comment. The SEC is now trying to determine who else at Republic was aware of the scheme, according to a person familiar with the investigation.

Meanwhile, law-enforcement authorities accuse Mr. Armstrong of running what is known as a Ponzi scheme: He "fraudulently used monies obtained from more recent" securities to "pay principal and interest due on older" securities, according to the complaint. Mr. Armstrong's lawyer, Marc Durant, won't comment on specifics, but says Mr. Armstrong is being made a "scapegoat" for wrongdoing at Republic's securities unit. Officials at Republic declined to comment.

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Britain's HSBC Holding PLC said its plans to acquire Republic, announced earlier this year, may be delayed because of the affair with Mr. Armstrong.

Mr. Armstrong's reams of investing treatises, many posted on his Web site, range from the monetary history of Persia to the "panic cycle in global capital flows." The historical database maintained by Princeton Economic International has been used by many media outlets.

The "first and most important rule about investing is to 'Know what you are buying and why!' " he warned in a July 1997 report headlined, "What the Press Doesn't Tell You About This Bull Market in Stocks."

But several analysts say they were hesitant to follow Mr. Armstrong's analysis because of his heavy trading in the markets he covered. (Among other things, he is one of the biggest silver traders on the New York Mercantile Exchange's Comex division.)

"I basically would ignore him because I knew he had an inherent conflict of interest," says Gil Atzmon, portfolio manager for U.S. Global Investors.

In January 1998, when silver was rising sharply, Mr. Armstrong told the media he was contacted by a plaintiffs' lawyer pursuing a civil price-manipulation lawsuit involving that market. The rumors of the lawsuit slammed silver prices for a 3% one-day loss. At the time, Mr. Armstrong said his firm had a trading position that would rise in value as the price of the metal declined. Silver prices bounced back, and the lawsuit was eventually filed by silver-market investors and dismissed.

"We were asked our opinion if the market was being manipulated or not and is there probable cause to go ahead" with a suit, Mr. Armstrong told Dow Jones Newswires at the time. "Based on the evidence I have seen and research that we have done, the answer is yes." The CFTC investigated the silver-price spike in general but didn't bring a case.

On two previous instances, Mr. Armstrong did face CFTC scrutiny. In 1985, the agency lodged a complaint against him for allegedly not registering and maintaining proper investment records. Then in June 1987, the agency fined Mr. Armstrong $10,000 and suspended his trading privileges for a year for improper risk disclosure and misrepresentation of his trading returns; part of the complaint was related to advertising in a Princeton newsletter.

Geoffrey F. Aronow, a former CFTC enforcement chief, says the substance of the latest charges against Mr. Armstrong aren't unusual at the CFTC. Only the amount of money is.

Unlike other market participants Tuesday, Mr. Aronow wasn't shocked that such a small firm was allegedly involved in manipulating so much money. "If people are holding onto their positions in [a fund like Princeton], then it becomes like a bank and there's no event to call attention to fraud," Mr. Aronow says. "In that case, I'd almost reverse the question. How could anyone know?"

Mr. Armstrong's current troubles were foreshadowed 30 years ago. Barely out of his teens, the avid stamp collector in 1969 published an ad in a stamp journal claiming he had rare and valuable stamps for sale, including two 1904 stamps. "These were extremely rare stamps," Ken Lawrence, an authority on stamp collecting, says now.

A few months later, another stamp collector ran his own ad saying he had those same stamps in his collection, not Mr. Armstrong. The case remained a mystery for years until the second collector's stamps came on the market in 1996, revealing that the second collector had the stamps and not Mr. Armstrong. "One of the strangest episodes in the history of the stamp hobby may finally be put to rest," said an article in the January 1997 edition American Philatelist, a stamp-collectors' journal. Mr. Armstrong's attorney declined to comment on the matter Tuesday.

Despite the problem, and his eventual dismissal from the American Philatelic Society in 1972, Mr. Armstrong in subsequent years wrote and published three books on stamp collecting that would become authoritative texts for collectors. Now out of print, those three editions are themselves sold as collectors' items at stamp auctions.

Over the years, Mr. Armstrong has had his accurate calls on more-conventional investments. Until 1995, his prediction about the movement in various Japanese financial indexes proved fairly accurate, which helped fuel sales by his staff of eight employees at the Cresvale brokerage branch in Tokyo. He wasn't shy about promotion, jumping at the chance to have his picture taken with heavyweights in any market in which he was playing. Princeton Economics' Web site, which is filled with Mr. Armstrong's essays on the markets, shows a photo of Mr. Armstrong with former United Kingdom Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at one of the firm's conferences in 1996.

Meanwhile, on the investment-lecture circuit, there apparently had been little inkling of Mr. Armstrong's impending arrest. Mr. Armstrong is scheduled to be one of the two keynote speakers at the Canadian Society of Technical Analysts conference Oct. 16-19. Larry Berman, president of the society and head of fixed-income research for CIBC World Markets, says he never has met Mr. Armstrong but has sometimes seen the Princeton Economics research.

"I've been told he is an excellent speaker, and he certainly has a wealth of knowledge," Mr. Berman said Tuesday. Mr. Armstrong will probably withdraw from the conference now, but if he decides to go through with it, Mr. Berman said, "That's great. If he comes, in my mind these are all allegations. Nothing has been proven."

-- E.S. Browning and Aaron Lucchetti contributed to this article.

Write to Jathon Sapsford at jathon.sapsford@news.wsj.com ; Peter A. McKay at peter.mckay@wsj.com ; Mitchell Pacelle at mitchell.pacelle@wsj.com ; Bill Spindle at bill.spindle@news.wsj.com ; E.S. Browning at jim.browning@wsj.com ; and Aaron Luchetti at aaron.lucchetti@wsj.com




To: Maple MAGA who wrote (162956)9/25/2020 9:41:46 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218079
 
Martin Armstrong

wsj.com

Martin Armstrong Is Sent To Jail Over Asset Order

By Mitchell PacelleStaff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Jan. 17, 2000 12:01 am ET
NEW YORK -- Martin A. Armstrong, the New Jersey investment adviser charged with defrauding Japanese investors, was sent to jail by a federal judge Friday evening for failure to fully comply with a court order to surrender assets.

Although Mr. Armstrong had turned over several carloads of antiquities to a court-appointed receiver last week, U.S. District Judge Richard Owen in Manhattan found him in contempt of court for failing to produce about $1.2 million of gold coins and for deleting numerous files from a company computer. Mr. Armstrong was taken away in handcuffs.

Mr. Armstrong, in a widely publicized case, was indicted in September on 14 counts of securities fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy, after losing as much as $950 million in Japanese corporate investment money. Separately, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission had sued Mr. Armstrong for fraud. Mr. Armstrong had been free on bail.

In September, the federal judge overseeing the civil suit had appointed a receiver to run Mr. Armstrong's Princeton Economics International Ltd. and had ordered Mr. Armstrong to surrender company assets. On Jan. 7, Judge Owen ordered him to turn over a multitude of gold and antiquities valued by the receiver at more than $16 million, including nearly $1 million of gold bars, a $750,000 bust of Julius Caesar and a cache of ancient coins.

On Friday, at a lengthy court hearing that stretched into the evening, the receiver argued that Mr. Armstrong hadn't fully complied with the asset-surrender order. Among the missing items were gold coins valued at about $1.2 million, the receiver said.

In addition, two of the Princeton Economics computers turned over by Mr. Armstrong had most of their files deleted last week, the receiver said. Mr. Armstrong testified that the file deletions had been a mistake.

Last week, Mr. Armstrong personally delivered a trove of items to the receiver, including several bags and boxes of old coins, six Romans busts and several boxes of corporate documents.

In a sworn statement filed last week, Mr. Armstrong's lawyer said the nearly $1 million in gold bars sought by the receiver had been used to pay the former managing partner of a Tokyo affiliate of Princeton Economics for his 50% stake in that operation. Other items were used as payment in a business transaction in Australia, the statement said. On Friday, Judge Owen deferred discussion of those transactions until a later date.

Mr. Armstrong's lawyer couldn't be reached over the weekend for comment.

Write to Mitchell Pacelle at mitchell.pacelle@wsj.com




To: Maple MAGA who wrote (162956)9/25/2020 9:41:53 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218079
 
Martin Armstrong

wsj.com

Martin Armstrong Is Told To Return Artifacts Trove

By Mitchell PacelleStaff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Jan. 10, 2000 12:01 am ET
Not too many investment advisers keep in their home a collection of gold bars and coins, a $750,000 bust of Julius Caesar and even an ancient bronze helmet, together worth $16 million.

But Martin A. Armstrong of Princeton Economics International Ltd. was always a unique individual, even before he was charged last year with defrauding Japanese investors of several hundred million dollars. Recently disclosed court documents show that Mr. Armstrong, an ancient-history buff, spent years amassing the trove of collectibles in his New Jersey home.

And on Friday, he was given four days to give them back or be held in contempt of court.

A New York federal judge ordered Mr. Armstrong to turn his collection over to a court-appointed receiver, though it's clear it won't be as simple as that. Mr. Armstrong's lawyer promised that his client would give up by Monday afternoon "whatever is in his possession and control." But in an interview minutes after the hearing ended, Mr. Armstrong said: "They're going to find out that a lot of the stuff I don't have." He declined to elaborate.

The court order was the latest twist in a broad-ranging securities scandal that engulfed Mr. Armstrong's Princeton Economics in the fall. The allegations raised havoc for Republic New York Corp., now a unit of HSBC Holdings PLC, which served as Mr. Armstrong's brokerage firm, and for scores of Japanese companies that invested with him. Princeton Economics is unrelated to the Ivy League university; before the scandal, Mr. Armstrong's firm was known mainly as a reputable source for historical market data.

Mr. Armstrong was indicted in September on 14 counts of securities fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy for allegedly losing as much as $950 million in Japanese corporate-investment money. Federal prosecutors said he sold $3 billion of securities to Japanese investors, then concealed the fact that he suffered hundreds of millions of dollars of trading losses.

Mr. Armstrong's former executive assistant, who for four years was also his live-in girlfriend, said in a newly disclosed affidavit that he had purchased the gold, coins and antiquities using money from Princeton Economics and its affiliates. He then stashed many of the items in closets at the modest Maple Shade, N.J., home where he grew up and still lives with his mother, she testified Friday.

Mr. Armstrong, now free on bail, has denied stealing any money. But his assets have been frozen, and federal prosecutors have recovered about $46 million.

The hearing was connected to a civil lawsuit brought in September by the Securities and Exchange Commission accusing Mr. Armstrong of fraud.

The court-appointed receiver now running Princeton Economics had asked that Mr. Armstrong be held in contempt for refusing to turn over the assets, as ordered by a federal judge in September.

In an affidavit filed in the SEC case in December, Tina Mustra, Mr. Armstrong's executive assistant since 1993, said she had lived with the financier, his mother and his two children from a previous marriage at his Maple Shade home, and at a New Jersey beach house, which she understood to be owned by one of the Princeton companies.

Ms. Mustra detailed a series of purchases by Mr. Armstrong of gold bullion, coins and antiquities. She said she had assisted Mr. Armstrong in arranging wire transfers from bank and brokerage accounts maintained by Princeton Economics and its affiliates to finance the purchases.

In early 1998, for example, Mr. Armstrong bought 102 one-kilogram (2.2 pounds) bars of gold for $988,647, she said. When the gold was delivered to Mr. Armstrong's office in Princeton, "Mr. Armstrong told me that he wanted to bring the gold to his mother's house in Maple Shade," Ms. Mustra said in the affidavit. "Afterward, Mr. Armstrong told me that he put the gold bars in the closet outside his bedroom on the second floor."

Among the other items Mr. Armstrong purchased, she said: a marble Roman bust, a bust of Julius Caesar, a Greek marble relief, an Egyptian sandstone relief, cuneiform tablets, a marble bust of Roman emperor Commodus and a variety of coins. "I observed Mr. Armstrong sit for hours in the hallway outside his bedroom studying the coins," she said.

On Aug. 27, Ms. Mustra said, Mr. Armstrong phoned and told her that "an issue had come up" in connection with the company. He instructed her by phone to "gather up several categories of corporate records and put them in boxes," then lock them into one of the few rooms with a lock, adding that he would remove them over the weekend, she said. When she returned on Monday, Aug. 30, the boxes were gone, she said.

On Sept. 1, the U.S. attorney in Manhattan obtained a warrant to search the offices. Mr. Armstrong was arrested on Sept. 13.

On Friday, federal Judge Richard Owen ruled that Mr. Armstrong "has personally been involved in the taking and secreting" of the valuable items, and that they are still in his "custody and control." Mr. Armstrong wasn't protected from turning them over by his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, the judge ruled.

Write to Mitchell Pacelle at mitchell.pacelle@wsj.com




To: Maple MAGA who wrote (162956)9/25/2020 9:42:00 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218079
 
Martin Armstrong

wsj.com

The Curious Contempt Case of Martin Armstrong

By peter
Feb. 16, 2007 9:31 am ET
Martin Armstrong is the white-collar defendant whom time forgot, writes Gretchen Morgensen in front-page story in today's New York Times. The fallen financier has spent seven years in at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan. Armstrong pleaded guilty to a securities fraud criminal charge last summer (click here for an earlier Law Blog post). "I think the government just wore Marty out," said one of his lawyers, Thomas Sjoblom of Proskauer Rose, to the NYT. His civil contempt imprisonment now roughly matches the estimated sentence he will receive for the crime to which he pleaded guilty. It's unclear whether he’ll get credit for the six years he’s already served; he's awaiting sentencing. In 1999, Armstrong was indicted on charges related to trading losses incurred by his firm, Princeton Economics International. The SEC and CFTC also filed a civil suit against him and asked the court to order him to turn over his assets. In January 2000, federal judge John Keenan imprisoned Armstrong for failing to surrender $14.9 million in gold bars and rare coins to the government, assets that Armstrong says he did not have. Sjoblom has said that Armstrong should have been released from jail after 18 months as required by the civil contempt statute. Sjoblom argued this point before the Second Circuit last January. The appeals court rejected the appeal to free Armstrong, but reassigned the case from Judge Richard Owen to Judge Kevin Castel, who is scheduled to hold a hearing on the contempt matter for March 15.