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Posted: Oct 25 2008     By: David Duval      Post Edited: October 31, 2008 at 1:31 pm

Filed under: David Duval

Dear CIGAs,

Here’s a thought provoking article about an M.I.T.trained economist, Krishnamurthy Narayanan,  whose GI Global Opportunities Fund has returned 57% in the past year and 19 per cent (compounded) over the past five years.

For those of you who remain convinced of the long term invincibility of the U.S. dollar, he sounds a note of caution if not down right alarm.

He also has some positive things to say about the Canadian dollar, gold, oil and uranium – hardly mainstream views these days. But his views were hardly mainstream a year ago when he warned about the financial crisis that is currently spreading like wildfire around the globe.

Heed the advice of The Smartest Man
October 25, 2008 at 6:00 AM EDT

Crackpot. Crank. Scaremonger. Alarmist.

The Smartest Man We Know has heard the slurs. When you make your living on Wall Street, yet hold the opinion that Wall Street is populated by incompetent fools, you’re not going to win a lot of friends at dinner parties, are you?

And when you bet millions that the American financial system is going to fall apart, that its economy will be seized with fear – and when you were doing this and saying this before there was any hint of real trouble – well, you couldn’t really expect other people to welcome the message, could you?

The Smartest Man, when delivering his prophesies, did not sugar-coat them. “This could potentially make Long-Term Capital [the financial crisis of 1998] look like some kind of walk in the park,” he predicted. “The reckoning has started.” No soft landing this time: It could even be “like the Great Depression of this century.” He said these things not last week, not last month, but on July 26, 2007. That day, the Dow Jones industrial average closed at 13,473.

But The Smartest Man was just getting warmed up. Checking in with him again this January, he was every bit as gloomy. By that point, credit fires were burning all over the place; the Dow was at 12,500; the world’s biggest banks had been forced to turn, cap in hand, to Singapore, China, the Middle East and elsewhere for billions of dollars. It won’t be enough, he said. “There’s a whole bunch of companies that just have to hit the wall. They can’t survive.”

What kind of companies? U.S. financial institutions, mostly. Wachovia looks bad. The major investment banks are shaky. It’s about to get a lot uglier, warned The Smartest Man. “The implications of what’s going on for the U.S. economy, credit, for lending over all, are not that pleasant to think of.” Two months and two days later, Bear Stearns was gone.

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