Interesting Gold commentary copied in below:
When the dollar and sterling go down, they must go down
against something. Most likely, as is happening, they
go down against gold, the ultimate anti-
paper...nature's anti-dollar...the real money to which
investors tend to turn when the printing presses
overheat.
"I'm betting that there is a correction in gold before
it goes much higher," warns colleague Dan Denning. "Too
many people are long gold and short the dollar."
We hoping he's right. We'd like another opportunity to
buy gold below $400. Six months ago, we thought we'd
already seen the last of $400 gold. Maybe now, we
really have. Gold below £240/oz may soon be out of
reach, too.
But even better than gold, says our friend, and
"Investment biker", Jim Rogers, are commodities. "No
country has ever gotten itself into this kind of debt
situation has ever in history gotten out without a
crisis or a semi-crisis," says Rogers. America's crisis
is likely to cause investors to lose faith in US
stocks, bonds and the dollar. Instead, they will want
real assets - such as commodities and gold. Commodities
are typically quoted in dollars. As the dollar weakens,
commodities go up. But there's something else pushing
up commodity prices. Buy cotton, sugar and coffee, says
Rogers, because they are selling at historically low
prices, and because demand - particularly from Asia -
is growing rapidly.
According to Jim Rogers, commodities themselves, the
companies that produce them, and the countries that
export them will be big winners in the years ahead.
[Ed.Note: Take sugar for example - the chart says it
all:
"The World Grows a Sweet Tooth"
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=4277&tp=a&nowversion=2