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September 3, 2008 at 23:21:21

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The Great Financial Bubble Scam: How Wall Street Plays Average Investors for Chumps

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By John F. Miglio (about the author)     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

opednews.com     Permalink

For OpEdNews: John F. Miglio - Writer

The Great Financial Bubble
Scam: How Wall Street Plays
Average Investors for Chumps

I don't throw darts at a board.
I bet on sure things.
-- Gordon Gekko

By John F. Miglio

In the 1990s, Wall Street brokers told average investors to buy stocks and mutual funds in the high-tech sector because high-tech stocks were the next big thing and investors would make a killing with them. And average investors did-- for a while.

Then the high-tech bubble burst and many average Americans lost one third to one half of the money they had invested in their retirement funds and 401K plans. Not to worry, they were told by Wall Street, real estate is the next big thing, so buy property and you'll make up the difference you lost in stocks.

Which a lot of people did, buying properties they couldn't afford with adjustable rate loans that should have never been made by mortgage brokers who were in it for a quick buck. But it didn't matter because prices were sky rocketing; even average investors were flipping properties for big profits.

But then the real estate bubble burst when interest rates reset and went substantially higher. As a result, home owners couldn't pay the higher rates and began to walk away from their homes. Also, those investors who bought real estate at the top of the market (including those greedy little flippers!) were now left with negative equity, so they walked away from their properties as well, causing huge foreclosure rates.

In the meantime, average American home owners who bought their homes years ago with traditional loans have lost anywhere from 20-40% of their home equity thanks to all the homes on the market in foreclosure. This phenomenon has hit baby boomers particularly hard because they had planned to use the equity in their homes for retirement.

Don't sit around and mope, commodities brokers advised disenchanted home owners, put your money in gold and silver. They're the next big thing! Their prices are sky rocketing! And they were-- for a while, but as of this writing gold is down about 20% and silver is down about 30%. So should investors sell or hold? Is this the end of the bull market in metals and commodities generally, or just a temporary retracement with much more upside potential?

No one knows for sure, since no one can predict the direction of a commodity with absolute certainty (as the fine print warns on any speculative contract). But forget absolute certainty. The big players on Wall Street (the hedge fund operators, the billionaire corporate raiders, the big guns at investment houses like Goldman-Sachs) may not know with absolute certainty about the future price of a commodity, but they have a pretty damn good idea which way the price is headed when they buy or sell huge blocks of commodities on the open market. And once they make their move, all their friends, associates, fellow speculators and day traders will hop on board and help push the price higher or lower, which creates a sudden price spike. And this is where they make their easy money.

It's usually at this point that average investors hear about the "big move" and enter the market because the commodity is "hot." But by then it's too late; the big players take their profits and hang average investors out to dry.

This is essentially what happened with the price of gold and silver. Gold had shot up over $1,000 an ounce and silver had gone over $20-- until the sudden spike down. Now gold is trading in the $800 range and silver in the $14 range.

But here's what's been happening behind the headlines. Last month, when gold and silver took a huge tumble, there was no fundamental reason for them to lose so much value so quickly. In other words, the fundamentals in the economy had not changed very much at the time of the plunge: inflation was still on the rise, home foreclosures and layoffs were getting worse, and the political conditions in the world were still precarious.

There was one change, however. During that same time frame, the price of oil, a commodity that influences the price of metals, had also fallen about 20%. But that begs the question: What made the price of oil suddenly change course so quickly? Less demand? True, Americans were driving less and using less gas, but that was a gradual trend, not something that happened overnight.

Was there a sudden scarcity in the supply of oil? No, not at all. So why did the price spike down? According to a report by Martin Vander Weyer in the British Telegraph, the price of oil "has finally revealed itself not as the fundamental reflection of scarce supply that its adherents liked to claim, but as a simple, speculative bubble that was always going to burst."

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www.onlinereviewofbooks.com

John F. Miglio is the editor of the Online Review of Books & Current Affairs and author of Sunshine Assassins, a futuristic political thriller.

The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.

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All true-- and more by martinweiss on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 at 2:00:33 PM
The Plunge Protection Team by Brad Evans on Friday, Sep 5, 2008 at 4:11:58 PM

 
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