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How to Position Yourself Now for a Bear

In yesterday’s Digest, we began a new series from global investment strategist Eric Fry. In it, Eric highlighted how recessions and bear markets can blindside many investors. He exposed several “leaks” in the $31 trillion U.S. stock market which are troubling.

In this second and final part of that series, Eric illustrates how, time and again, the so-called experts have missed these “leaks” right before they broke big and caused major financial storms.

More importantly, he offers up specific ways to protect yourself against — and even profit from such storms.

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Keep in mind, Eric was one of the few analysts who predicted the last big market crash, in 2007-’08. He showed his readers how to profit off of companies that eventually went bust. In fact, his readers could have walked away with gains like 1,415% on Countrywide Financial, 4,408% on Fannie Mae, and even 6,425% on Freddie Mac.

To me, there’s no one better to show you how to gain a huge advantage during market turbulence.

I’ll let Eric take it from here.

Jeff Remsburg

Take Off Your Bear Market Blinders and Focus on These Propositions
By Eric Fry, Fry’s Investment Report

A few days before the epic stock market crash of 1929, the renowned economist Irving Fisher declared, “Stock prices have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau … I expect to see the stock market a good deal higher within a few months.”

Seven decades after Fisher’s infamous faux pas, another esteemed economist issued an equally misguided forecast. That economist was Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.

On March 6, 2000, Greenspan assured a Boston College conference on the “New Economy” that the internet-based economy would continue to foster productivity, technology innovation, and enduring wealth creation.

“I see nothing to suggest that these opportunities will peter out anytime soon,” Greenspan predicted. “Indeed, many argue that the pace of innovation will continue to quicken in the next few years as companies exploit the still largely untapped potential for e-commerce.”

Alas, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index topped out almost immediately after Greenspan stepped away from the podium.

But at the birth of the new millennium, Greenspan was not the only learned individual to predict a “new era” of permanent prosperity. So did Washington Post columnist James Glassman and economist Kevin Hassett. In late 1999, the duo published the first edition of Dow 36,000, in which they predicted the Dow Jones Industrial Average would hit 36,000 within a few years.