Here Are Some of the New Taxes Coming to Virginia Under Democrat Rule....
You Can See Why That Anti-ICE Lawsuit Filed by Minnesota Was Such a...
Utah Law Banning Inappropriate Material In School Libraries Faces Legal Challenge
The Traffic Tickets Looked Routine. The Pattern Behind Them Didn’t.
Here's How Much Money CA Is Losing As Hollywood Takes Production to Friendlier...
FBI Serves Subpoenas to Offices of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, AG Keith Ellison,...
After Losing Government Immigration Money, Catholic Bishops Question America’s ‘Moral Role...
Hijab Solidarity? No, Thank You.
Trump Dumps ATF Merger Plan
Danish Member of European Parliament Tells President Trump to 'F**k Off'
Gavin Newsom’s Davos Tantrum: Embarrassing Ramble About Trump, Europe, and Greenland
Guess How Much of Every Humanitarian Dollar the US Spends Actually Reaches the...
You Won't Believe These Deleted Posts by Mamdani's Equity Chief
President Trump Trolls Europe With These AI-Generated Images
There Is a Bombshell New Report Out About Trump's Immigration Policies
OPINION

Invest Like Pirate

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

One of the most popular movie series of all-time has been Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean starring Johnny Depp. 

Fraught with action, adventure, and danger, these same words can also be used to describe the U.S. Treasury market. 

Advertisement

In fact, the similarities are almost chilling.  If you’re sailing on the high seas and a storm was imminent, more than likely you would head for the nearest port. 

Trying to ride out the storm would probably bring death and destruction, and anything would be better than that. 

However, if the port within reach was occupied by Johnny Depp and his collection of thugs and cutthroats, you might think twice, but at least you would stand a chance.   

Investment giants like Bill Gross, Warren Buffett, Peter Schiff, and many others have been warning against treasuries for quite some time. 

The devaluation of currencies, impending hyper-inflation, the lack of confidence, and escalating debt make treasuries a loser.  Or so they say.  So who was I to contradict these legends? 

However, I’ve done a bit of sailing in my time, and I’ve certainly seen a lot of movies. 

So it just made sense to me to choose the lesser of two evils.  Since 3.6% on the 10-year Treasury, I’ve pounded the table on buying them. 

As we grab a 2-handle, and I believe a 1-handle to come, buyers are responding as I thought they would. 

Manufacturing continues to plummet, housing prices are collapsing, and unemployment is steadily rising, not to mention escalating oil and food costs coupled with global turmoil. 

As a result, concern will turn to worry, which will turn to fear, and then to panic.  Somewhere along that path, the evils of the treasury market will not seem so bad when compared to the other alternatives. 

Advertisement

So remember, just as Johnny Depp and his henchmen don’t look so treacherous when a killer storm is rapidly approaching, neither do U.S. Treasuries when a killer economy is rapidly rolling our way.

Whether a movie or real life, “any port in a storm” seems to be as true today as it ever was.    

Arrgh.            


See Also These Top Stories

Boneheaded Stimulus Never Works: Larry Kudlow
Obama's Nuclear Option on Economy: John Ransom
Peek Behind the Housing Curtain: Kathy Fettke
Invest Like Pirate: Bill Tatro
Chu Pimps Your Budget at the Pump: Bob Beauprez
The New America Movement: John Ransom
Dave Says Live Below Your Means: Dave Ramsey
China Flunks 4 out of 5 Currency Tests: Mike Shedlock
A Securities Law Primer For Startups: Cliff Ennico
Dems: Greed is Good as a Tax Credit: John Ransom
See The Ticker for daily commentary on money and markets.

Join John Ransom on Facebook and follow him @Twitter 

Email: thfinance@mail.com


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement