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147 of 150 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Provocative Viewpoint on the Market and the Economy,
By
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
Robert Prechter Jr. is well-known in stock market circles for his Elliott Wave predictions over the years have had their success and failures. This is Prechters third and latest book (At the Crest of the Tidal Wave (1995) and The Elliott Wave Principle (1978)). His current book is really two books in one printed on different colored paper! Even if you do not agree with Prechters view of the world, you should certainly understand his arguments and make your own decisions.Part I (135 pp.) focuses on why he believes a stock market crash will occur in the near term, as well why deflation and economic depression are high probability scenarios. Although deflation and depression are rare occurrences, Prechter believes that they are at the brink. His goal is writing the book is to provide insight into defining both events and make you believe that they can happen, and eventually make you believe that they are likely to happen. Prechter compares the period 1942-1966 (called Wave III) with the economic expansion of 1974-2000 (Wave V). He points out that the most recent period had much weaker economic fundamentals and performance than the prior period, although by stock market standards Wave V had an increase of 1930% on the DJIA compared to 971% during Wave III. In his analysis he provides comprehensive statistics on GDP, Industrial Production, Capacity Utilization, Unemployment rate, households liquid assets, federal and consumer debt, prime rate, federal budget deficit, personal savings among others. Prechter then defines depression and its relationship to the stock market. One of his key observations is that major stock market declines lead directly to depressions. Prechter depicts the five waves evident in the stock market using four charts. He points out that the five-wave pattern occurs even taking into account major news events such as Hitlers rise to power and the end of the Vietnam war. Prechter provides four signs of a market top and explains the Elliott Wave characteristics of each of the five waves. Prechter presents his case for the existing stock market precarious situation (as of March 2002) by covering Wave V in great detail. He spends considerable time examining the fifth wave from 1974 to 2000 compared to previous waves. The case for the historically high stock evaluation is made by focusing on the low dividend yield, outrageously high book value, and high P/E ratio. Prechter then covers how psychology plays a major role in a stock market advance and decline. He reviews the psychology of he economists, brokerage strategists, money managers, public, and the media. Prechter believes that the upcoming bear market will be the most devastating since the great depression and perhaps since 1720-1784. If this occurs, he indicates that the U.S. will experience another depression. He forecasts that the DJI will plummet to 777, the August 1982 low, if that average follows the pattern of the prior manias (e.g., Nikkei; DJI 1929-32; Gouda tulip bulbs (1634-1722); and the South Sea Company (1719-1722)). Lastly, he makes the case for deflation, and discusses the Fed and banking system. Book Two provided Prechters advice for protecting yourself and profiting from the upcoming depression. His recommendations include: Prechter provides a very sobering view of the future that few individuals will heed because of its negative and extreme consequences. But if this book makes you think about the safety of your financial nest eggs, retirement funds, insurance policies, etc; then at least you can decide to take some steps to protect yourself. If the stock market can manage to rally 20-40% from the lows of July 2002, then perhaps you should consider cashing in your remaining equity and mutual funds positions before the real bear market takes hold as Prechter envisions. I know I will be doing that and then using my charts and technical indicators to tell me when to get back in. Its shame that Prechter did not publish this book in March 2000 when the market was at its peak. He would have saved most investors, who believed his work, a great deal of money if they had followed his recommendations. Whether you agree with Prechters view of the world, you will certainly agree with this quote:
310 of 328 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book will cause you no financial harm if followed,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
Let me get this off my chest first: I read every single review here at Amazon before I bought this book and I must say that the negative reviews; or more accurately the nasty ones, lead me to believe that the reviewers did not read the book. I say that because even if Prichter is wrong, and there is no upcoming "Deflationary Depression" and this decade is all blue skies just like the late 1990's were, any subsequent readers who followed his advice to the exact letter of the verbage would NOT lose any of their assets whatsoever. Therefore, how could this book do harm? At worst it educates the reader as to how to handle uncertain times. There is no bad or harmful advice in this book. His advice is basically to pay off your bills, put your money in rock solid banks. Don't rely on the government to protect you, buy some precious metals, and get ready to profit once we are at the rock bottom by way of investment strategies that take advantage of the subsequent inflation post a "Deflationary Depression." What's harmful about being in cash? Now the review: Prichter is confident that there is going to be a deflationary depression. A period of great contraction in our economy that drives down any and all inflated value out of any goods or services such as the depression the United States suffered through in 1929. He supports his premise with monetary statistics such as the 30 trillion dollar credit bubble that America now has, and numerous other statistics that aren't that pretty. Prichter also bases his premise for a "Deflationary Depression" on a controversial charting method known as "The Elliot Wave Theory". It's controversial in that some stock market analysts think it is merely conjecture, while other analysts feel it is an absolute, social, "fractal". (A "Fractal" is defined as a geometric shape that self repeats over and over into a larger shape. This can especially be observed in nature.) As a result, the Elliot Wave Theory is believed to be an accurate way of charting graphs whereas the viewer trained in this principle can predict where that statistic is going to go based on Elliot Wave analysis. Whether this is nonsense or not, every major brokerage firm has an Elliot Wave analyst. Prichter teaches the basics of this technique and supports his findings with background statistics such as market volume and breath. The book is divided into two sections: Why a "Deflationary Depression" is going to happen, and the second part of the book covering how to profit and protect yourself when it does. At the very least this book is an educational exercise as to what to do if a "Deflationary Depression" or bear market occurs. To repeat, his advice would do no harm if followed even if he is wrong. Challenge any reviewer who says otherwise. Tony
165 of 183 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read This Book While There's Still Time!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
A lot of what drives market activity--and what creates opportunities for profitable trades--is herd behavior. When prices start to go up, the bullish sentiment spreads, and as soon as a crowd gets involved, a rally is underway. When fear sets it, it gets contagious and the market crashes.
But the really big opportunities come from the ability to step outside of the herd's expectations and see things from a different perspective. If you have the wisdom and the courage to go against the popular belief, you can reap substantial rewards, especially if your timing is right. And someone who demonstrates that ability to defy the herd is someone worth paying attention to. Robert R. Prechter Jr. is a good example. As the world-renowned popularizer of the Elliott Wave Principle, he has repeatedly revealed his capacity for original and insightful thinking. Along the way, he has time and again come up with startling forecasts for the markets and for the economy, sharing perceptions that boggle the minds of the more pedestrian pundits who are hopelessly locked into linear thinking. In 2002 Prechter published a watershed book, Conquer the Crash, in which he made some astonishing predictions that defied the popular logic of the time, when the focus of the financial experts was on buy-and-hold strategies in the stock market, speculation in real estate that could presumably only go up in value, and on hedging investment positions with sophisticated derivatives as a kind of portfolio insurance. And what did Bob Prechter predict? The implosion of collateralized securities. The collapse of Fannie Mae and the crumbling of major banks. The failure of bond-rating services to issue timely warnings. The advent of bailout schemes from the government. And an extremely rare, simultaneous plunge in real estate prices, commodities, and the stock market. Oddly enough, as one after another of Prechter's forecasts were precisely reflected in the financial news of recent years, he didn't get much attention in the mainstream press. Maybe it was because his book also featured another prediction--that we are facing a deflationary depression. While some would argue that deflation is impossible under the present circumstances, it might be prudent at least to consider that possibility, especially considering the stunning accuracy of Bob Prechter's other predictions. And if you're willing to take a peek at that scenario, Prechter has just the thing for you--a brand-new edition of Conquer the Crash! All of the analysis and insight from the original edition is included in the new second edition. But Prechter has added 188 pages of entirely new material, and every one of the book's pages is worth reading and re-reading, even if your copy of the original edition is coffee-stained and dog-eared. There are plenty of fresh gems between the covers. Here are just a few samples: "It is not the case that Fed chairmen are either fools or geniuses, as their records appear to imply. They do, however, preside over eras that make them appear to be one or the other." "I hate to challenge mainstream 20th century macroeconomic theory, but the idea that a growing economy needs easy credit is a false theory. Credit should be supplied by the free market, in which case it will almost always be offered intelligently, primarily to producers, not consumers." "Those waiting to get rich in the stock market, however, have just been kidnapped, trussed up and thrown in the trunk of a car heading to Bankruptcy City. . . . Just look at this 25-year trendline, which just burst like an Army Corps levee." "One of the biggest scams ever perpetrated is the idea that the stock market has made people rich over the past 80 years. Almost the entire gain in the Dow is due to debasement of the currency." Even more important, though, the new edition of Conquer the Crash does more than just make dire forecasts and describe an ever-more-likely scenario of extended economic catastrophe. It also provides sound, specific strategies not just for surviving a wave of deflationary depression, but also for turning the troubled times ahead into an enormous opportunity for profit and personal prosperity. Note the word "specific" here. Conquer the Crash not only offers clear theoretical insights and extraordinary strategic thinking; it also provides a treasure trove of references and useful resources, including websites, phone numbers, and the names of sound banks, insurers, gold dealers, advisors, and other individuals who can help you with your plans for prosperity during a deflationary depression. There's also an access code for a special online question-and-answer forum for readers of the book. So here's the bottom line. Get a copy of Conquer the Crash immediately. Then read it, and put the strategies it suggests into action. If Bob Prechter's forecasts somehow turn out to be wrong, you won't really be any worse off--in fact, you'll wind up with a more solid grasp on your own financial future. But if he turns out to be right, you'll not only be able to make it through the coming depression--you'll also be able to reap some very big rewards as we hit bottom in a time of unprecedented opportunity. ***** By the way, here's what I had to say about the original edition of this book back in 2002: "How much time is left?" That's the question that kept ringing through my mind as I finished reading Bob Prechter's new book, Conquer the Crash. "How much time is left? And how fast can I take appropriate action?" There's definitely a sense of urgency created in this insightful and wonderfully readable book. While it's not specifically about equities trading or financial astrology, the topics that provide the usual focus for Financial Cycles, it's required reading for market astrologers, active traders, and anyone else who wants to enhance his or her prospects for economic survival in the years ahead. Prechter, the world's preeminent authority on Elliott Wave theory, makes an extremely convincing argument, not only that we are headed for a major market crash and a widespread depression much bigger than the one 70 years ago, but also that we will experience severe deflation, halting and reversing the inflationary trend that has been a bedrock assumption in virtually all financial planning throughout our lives. He examines market history, social psychology, and the prevailing money myths to create a startlingly clear vision of some pretty scary situations that demand serious attention. Along the way, he illuminates the workings of the Federal Reserve, assesses the impact of increasing terrorism, examines the outlook for government, and makes suggestions for employers, collectors, and prospective retirees. And while he isn't writing about financial astrology, he does provide vital insights into the workings of economic and social cycles-not only Elliott Wave, but the Kondratieff long wave as well. That's not to say that this is a technical book written only for seasoned analysts or would-be experts. In fact, the opposite is true. It contains some of the clearest, easiest-to-understand material I've ever read on Elliott Wave. But more importantly, its real charm, and its usefulness, comes from the fact that Bob Prechter is writing for average folks who probably haven't really given much thought to what might happen to the economy in the years ahead. And while some of the insights in Conquer the Crash are scary enough, this isn't really a doom-and-gloom piece. It's chock full of practical tips for specific actions you can and should take right now. You'll find valuable guidance here, not only on how to handle the stock market ("The opportunity to make money on the downside in a deflationary crash can hardly be overstated"), but also on real estate, bonds, insurance, banking, annuities, and precious metals. And the actions Prechter suggests aren't vague generalities-you'll find easy-to-read check lists of the particular things you can do in various situations, plus specific names of financial and research institutions that can provide additional help, along with toll-free phone numbers, URLs, and other contact information. All at once, Conquer the Crash manages to be gripping, thought-provoking reading, a handy reference book, and a stirring call to personal action. As Prechter notes, he certainly gets into "concerns that most investment counselors view as little different from paranoia. As the old saying goes, I may be paranoid, but that doesn't mean there isn't someone following me. In the final analysis, it is better to be safe and wrong than exposed and wrong." Robert Prechter deserves a lot of respect for the outstanding work he has done over the years in his analysis of social and economic trends. He never hesitates to define his point of view clearly, and he's never afraid to risk taking a stand. As a result he is one of those truly rare commodities in today's hype-filled age: a genuinely original thinker. Conquer the Crash is a delightful case in point. If Bob Prechter is right, the only question is how much time is left for you to take appropriate action. And if it turns out that he's wrong, taking the actions he suggests won't endanger your financial security or severely impact your current lifestyle in any negative way. So what have you got to lose? I strongly suggest that you get your hands on a copy of this book, read it, and pay very close attention to what it says. -Tim Bost [...]
77 of 83 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good to read but be aware,
By
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression, Expanded and Updated Edition (Paperback)
If you are an experienced reader of financial publications and would like to read a view that is very different but presented with arguments and reasoning - this is a good book to read. A different view will likely shine a new light to known facts and pull some new ones that you have not considered recently. Even if you don't agree with the author, such reading has high value if facts are presented well. These are. You should keep in mind though, that author stresses that he foresaw long bull market before many, knew its characteristics, etc. But his own advisory service (tracked by Hulbert Financial Magazine) has very poor results. He is way behind broad market on a "regular investors" portfolio and dramatically negative in his "trader" portfolio. His performance looks very consistent bad during a good 20 years period. So, in fact, you would look like a true hero if you took all his "trader" advises and did just opposite! Note, that it is not just stock picking that is bad. Timing-only returns are even worse. So, remember, your brain cannot retire yet. Given that - it is a good reading, good perspective to consider.
If you are just starting to read financial publications - you might not appreciate the fact that there are thousands of financial publishers at any given time. All, yes, all of them are smart. Really smart. Finance has so many dimensions that it is possible to argue any number of views at the same time - all well grounded and reasoned. When you are starting, anything you read impresses you, looks totally convincing and even evident. Moreover, you will have a feeling that you can make a confident use of newly acquired knowledge. This is why it is NOT good first reading for you. Before you have your brain active - you need some measured background reading. It is simply NOT POSSIBLE to judge from common sense - it takes decades to build common sense in finance. This is a radical view, expressed by rather radical author, practicing non-scientific ideas. His ideas cannot be proven or disproven because he talks about things that happens ones in a century or once in 3 centuries! So, keep in mind a simple fact - this particular man was right big time once but he himself was not able to make any use of his seeing into future. His theory was with him all along but help none either. In fact, you were better off not hearing his advices! I'd keep doing just that. This does not mean I dislike (or like) his prognosis. He may be right and he maybe wrong. He might be right in direction but wrong in the extent. Or any combinations. There is nothing in his book or in his performance so far to make it anything but a pure guess.
59 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Prechter's conclusion probably right, but timing is wrong,
By A Customer
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
First, I have been reading Robert Prechter since the early 90s, and he certainly makes a persuasive argument with his Elliot Wave analaysis. Problem is, he has been wrong on shorter time frame swings many times during the 90s, so it comes down to the reader to make up his own mind. To dismiss him as a "gloom-n-doomer" is ignorant and silly, yet to blindly follow him is also naive. The truth is probably somewhere in the middle. His 1995 book "At the Crest of the Tidal Wave" made a much more persuasive argument for an inevitable severe market downturn and subsequent depression. This follow-up 1992 book, "Conquer the Crash", was probably intended for the masses who ignored his earlier work. His 1995 book was SO persuasive that I missed the 1995-2000 bull market because I was convinced that Prechter could also time the market. He can't. And yet I still am convinced that most of his conclusions are correct. (The jury is still out on the severity of it.) Look around, after you take your blinders off: Good-paying jobs are leaving the U.S. for India, China etc. The US government has to adjust the unemployment figures by removing from it those who have given up looking for work. And many of those who do find work are taking 30-50% pay cuts. Consumer debt (mortgages, home equity, credit cards) are rising and rising. State, local and federal government debt is still rising. Corporate debt continues to rise. The dollar is dropping in value. Corporations' liabilities (health care and pensions) are rising and rising. Government liabilities (social security and Medicare) are still rising. How will this all play out? Who and how will debt be paid? Even Harry Dent, in his popular 1992 book "The Great Boom Ahead", and his follow-up "The Roaring 2000s" predicts the "Mother of all Depressions" to arrive around 2010, when the baby boomer's spending spree winds down, and they begin retiring. So think about it, the eternal pessimist Robert Prechter and the eternal optimist Harry Dent BOTH AGREE on the inevitable arrival of an economic depression. They only disagree on the timing. So somewhere between now (2003-2004) and 2010 the U.S. and the world will fall into the consequences of their multi-decade debt build-up and the demographics of an aging population and a blind government. The long-awaited depression will arrive. Argument settled.
37 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Came Away Disappointed,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
I read the second edition of this book with great interest. I felt that the first part of the book, which he wrote in 2002 to be very accurate, and full of helpful insights. To all the people who gave the book negative reviews, it is hard to argue that in 2002 he did not very specifically predict the financial mess we are now in, and that he specifically called out the credit crisis, bank failures, the Freddie/Fanny troubles and many other things. He did this at a time when everyone else was saying the exact opposite thing. He should be congratulated on being right when everyone else (almost) was wrong.
The reason for my bad rating on the book is that I bought the book to specifically see his new thoughts given that his original 2002 scenarios had played out. Where are we now, and what will happen next? I wanted to better understand the context of the present economic condition in light of his thoughts and theories. Unfortunately, the "New" part of the book was nothing more than an appendix with his monthly newsletters from the last three or four years. This compilation of monthly newsletters in no way puts the present economy in perspective. If I want a newsletter format, I will subscribe to a newsletter. I buy a book to get an author to put the big picture into perspective, which the new section of this book failed to do. I am in agreement with the author that things are about to get much worse. I am not sure that I agree with his scenario on the way things collapse. He continues to predict that the path will be rampant deflation leading to depression. I have trouble seeing that the path would not be hyperinflation leading to depression. The way to properly protect oneself in the collapse is to properly identify whether the form of the collapse will come from deflation or hyperinflation. Choose wrong, and you lose everything. If the rampant government spending/expansion of the FED balance sheet/printing money continues, I can not see how the end result would be deflation. I see a simple scenario where A) Government prints money, B) China stops lending us money, C) We print money to pay off debt/fund deficit. After reading his book, I am still not seeing how this scenario is not the one that happens. It is an important point, because in deflation, you would want all cash, and in hyperinflation you would want no cash. I was sorely disappointed after reading the book. The "New" part of the book was not worthwhile, and the old part is ancient history.
58 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
No need to buy the book, just read this review,
By Phil Nyzack (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
The book may be interesting if you haven't read this sort of thing before, but this type of book can be summed up thus: 1.Paper assets (stocks/bonds) and tangibles (precious metals and other commodities) go up in down in opposing cycles, and no matter how much you point this out, almost no one believes the present cycle will reverse. 2.The present cycle (paper assets) has begin its reverse. Stocks/bonds have begun to tank, and tangibles have begun to climb. 3.Anyone who holds on to their paper assets will suffer terrible losses, and anyone who buys gold/silver/platinum with both hands will get rich. It is still early enough in the game such that the mainstream view is that this sort of talk is nonsense. 3.The prudent way to buy metals is to buy all three metals in bullion form plus a mutual fund that consists of non-hedged gold/silver mining stocks. 4.Don't employ margin; there will be fierce mini-bears during the metals bull market. 5.Don't trade (trying to time the ups and downs). Buy now, while metals are still a contrarian move, and don't sell until the public is as enthusiastic about metals as they were about paper three years ago. Selling too soon is s classic error, as is continuing to hold on after Time and Newsweek are covering the raging metals bull market (probably in the middle-to-late part of this decade) as cover stories. 6.Don't bother discussing this all with anyone; they won't listen now, and will climb aboard late in the bull after the easy money has already been made and will use margin and get wiped out and blame you. 7.At the peak of the metals bull, people will be piling in and ignoring (what will have become by then) knock-down bargains like General Electric and Disney and 3M. --The only thing I would add to these gloom-and-doom books is when you take your amazing precious metal profits a few years from now, better diversify internationally. Don't assume the U.S. will be the top dog thirty or forty years from now. More likely, Spanish will be the primary language here, taxes will be sky-high, and the Orient will be where the next stock market killing will be made (low taxes, low regulation, teeming masses of smart, hard-working people). Have fun and be careful, spread yourself around so you don't have all your eggs in one basket.
41 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good Book - there are pros and cons,
By "mchewett" (Frisco, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
Pros:1. Provides wonderful parallels of historic downturns to present economic environment Cons: 1. The idea of an apocalyptic depression crippling the US economy is a little out there (DJIA sub 1000????????) Overall: the Pro's outweigh the Con's. I only wish I would have read it 2 years ago.
26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Judgement Pending,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
There are, in my humble opinion, two quite glaring qualifications in Conquer the Crash 2nd Ed., either of which can pretty much undo Prechter's basic thesis that we face severe deflation. I believe that these qualifications should have been addressed in light of events that occurred in 2008 and the first half of 2009. Although published in the Fall of 2009, the 2nd edition fails to go beyond 2007, except for a short article from 2008, noted below.
The first qualification to Prechter's thesis is his statement that the Fed cannot prevent deflation because the Fed will not print money to fight deflation because, historically, printing money has not been the Fed's "primary function." It strikes me as odd that a scholar such as Prechter could be so naive to think that the Fed's "primary function" in 2002 (date of 1st edition of CTC) would never change. Unless I am terribly way off-base, expansion of money supply through "grinding out banknotes" has, for at least the past year, been a primary function of the Fed. (Besides, it is usually a weak argument that depends on a negative inference - to say that, of two possibilities, one exists because the other does not.) The second qualification to Prechter's thesis is his candid admission that he could be wrong, followed by his (fairly) unequivocal admission that a plummeting dollar or soaring price of gold would foretell inflation instead of deflation. He leaves himself some, but not alot, of wiggle room. Three questions were submitted to Elliott Wave International via its website facility on December 5, 2009, generally following those set out below: A. Conquer the Crash, 2d Ed., Ch. 13, states on page 125: "Countless people say that deflation is impossible because the Federal Reserve Bank can just print money to stave off deflation. If the Fed's main jobs were simply establishing new checking accounts and grinding out banknotes, that's what it might do. But in terms of volume, that has not been the Fed's primary function, which for 89 years has been in fact to foster the expansion of credit. Printed fiat currency depends almost entirely upon the whims of the issuer, but credit is another matter entirely." Question: Although, historically, printing money has not been the Fed's "primary function," since at least the Fall of 2008, is it not true that the Fed has been running the printing presses, big time? B. Conquer the Crash, 2d Ed., Ch. 13, states on page 134: "How can you tell if my conclusion about deflation is wrong and that inflation or hyperinflation is taking place instead of deflation? . . . If the price of the dollar against other currencies begins to plummet, it might mean that the market fears dollar inflation . . . If gold begins to soar in dollar terms, then the market almost always fears inflation." Question: Do the plummeting dollar and soaring price of gold over the past several months indicate inflation instead of deflation? C. Although Conquer the Crash, 2nd Ed. was printed in the Fall of 2009, with the exception of a "bonus excerpt" dated June 9, 2008, pp. 361-362, to my great disappointment the updates to the 2002 edition extend only through 2007. (Lack of ability or time would be an unacceptable excuse for omitting 2008 and the first half of 2009; in the preface, the author indicates that the 1st edition it was produced in 3 months, which is a remarkably short time for such a scholarly work.) Question: Why did the author not in the 2nd edition address 2008 and the first part, at least, of 2009? Are we expected to subscribe to his newsletter to fill in that which the book ignores? * * * Until satisfactory answers to these questions are provided, I feel I have no choice but to not rate Conquer the Crash. (It was necessary to assign at least 1 star to get Amazon's system to accept this review). With satisfactory answers (i.e. not expecting any particular answer; merely logical, sensible responses) I would be inclined to give it 5 stars.
69 of 79 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Who are you going to believe?,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression (Hardcover)
Subscribers to Prechter's newsletters will have already read most of what is in this book. But for the other 99.99% of investors in the world who are not his subscribers, he has distilled down his reasoning and recommended course of actions into one convenient place.This book is really two books within one set of covers -- the publisher even uses two different kinds of paper stock to differentiate the "books." In "book one," Prechter draws from history and shows charts & graphs (some going back 300 years) of what has happened in situations similar to what we are going through today. Known for his Elliott Wave analysis, Prechter does not stop there. He uses all of the tools of technical and fundamental analysis to methodically build his argument that the current market downturn is very far from over. Like a lawyer presenting a case, he covers everything from esoteric considerations such as rising federal debt as a percentage of GDP, to public psychology, to the ultimate impotence of the Fed. At the end of the section, the reader is left with the choice to either believe that history repeats, or that "this time it's different." "Book two" presents practical advice of what to do now. He offers suggestions of what to do if you're in the stock market and your account is way down. He covers junk bonds, real estate, treasuries, pension plans, 401Ks, insurance, gold, and the whole spectrum of investments. To help the reader, he lists the safest banks in the country. He has eye-opening advice for people who are relying on government protection such as FDIC bank account insurance. Finally, he shows how to actually profit in the environment we are currently in. Some disparage Prechter for his past fault of getting out of the market too early. It's a valid criticism; nevertheless, every one of his predictions are currently playing out. How do you argue with someone who is right? Ultimately, the reader is left with a choice. One is to follow the financial mass media, economists and brokerage analysts who say recovery is just around the corner. The other is to look at history and Prechter's prediction, along with his track record of being only one of a handful of people to predict the magnitude of the market crash. Who are you going to believe? |
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Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression by Robert R. Prechter Jr. (Hardcover - November 9, 2009)
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