1/08/2007

Marc Faber Says Time To Sell

The contrarian investor Marc Faber says it is time to sell. He went bullish on USA in July 2006.

Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Marc Faber, who predicted the U.S. stock market crash in 1987, said global assets are poised for a ``severe correction'' and says it's time to sell.

``In the next few months, we could get a severe correction in all asset markets,'' Faber said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in New York. ``In a selling panic you should buy, but in the buying mania that we have now the wisest course of action is to liquidate.''

Faber, founder and managing director of Hong Kong-based Marc Faber Ltd., advised investors to buy gold in 2001, which has since more than doubled. His company manages about $300 million in assets.

The bullish outlook of traders in everything from bonds, equities and commodities to real estate and art suggests valuations are peaking, Faber said. Last year, the Morgan Stanley Capital International World Index of developed stock markets jumped 18 percent, while a survey of Wall Street's biggest bond- trading firms predicted U.S. Treasuries will post the best gains in five years during 2007.

``I am not a great buyer of assets now,'' Faber said. ``We may be in a situation where consumer-price inflation comes back and will have a negative impact on the valuation of assets.''

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Don't know about you but some of my small caps are performing quite well so far today. We'll see what the afternoon brings.

Pradeep Bonde said...

Market will probably make the major move only after earning season. Lot of sector rotation is going on. Your stocks are doing well because you have bought stocks with good earnings in early stages :-) Those in late stages are vulnerable.
Market wil go up when sentiments get sufficiently negative. Beginning of year everyone was too happy.

nodoodahs said...

So "Doom Gloom Boom" is saying "sell?" How many other crashes did he predict since 1987, versus how many there were?

So far the year has been profitable, but it's early yet ...