Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century by Addison Wiggin, William Bonner

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    (Hardcover)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0471449733
    • Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
    • Pub. Date: October 2003
    • Condition:

    Comments from the Seller: 09/2003 Hardcover Good in good dust jacket. Good, In good dust jacket. Glued binding. Paper over boards. With dust jacket. 306 p. Contains: Illustrations.

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    Synopsis

    "History shows that people who save and invest grow and prosper, and the others deteriorate and collapse.
    As Financial Reckoning Day demonstrates, artificially low interest rates and rapid credit creation policies set by Alan Greenspan and the Federal Reserve caused the bubble in U.S. stocks of the late '90s. . . . Now, policies being pursued at the Fed are making the bubble worse. They are changing it from a stock market bubble to a consumption and housing bubble.
    And when those bubbles burst, it's going to be worse than the stock market bubble . . .
    No one, of course, wants to hear it. They want the quick fix. They want to buy the stock and watch it go up twenty-five percent because that's what happened last year, and that's what they say on TV."
    —Jim Rogers, author of the bestseller Adventure Capitalist
    from the Foreword to Financial Reckoning Day

    Advanced praise from bestselling authors

    "An investment book that will not only enlarge your investment horizon, but also make you laugh and thoroughly entertain you for a few hours."
    —Dr. Marc Faber, author of the bestseller Tomorrow's Gold

    "Financial Reckoning Day is . . . in the category of scintillating sex or good vision, something to be savored and enjoyed-before it is too late."
    —James Dale Davidson, author of the bestseller The Great Reckoning and The Sovereign Individual

    "A powerful and insightful vision . . . each paragraph stimulates a new rush of thoughts that fills in gaping holes in the investor's understanding of what has happened to their dreams . . . while prepping them to confront any new confusion thatmay arrive."
    —Martin D. Weiss, author of the bestseller Crash Profits

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    Biography

    WILLIAM BONNER is President and CEO of Agora Publishing, one of the largest financial newsletter companies. Headquartered in Baltimore, Agora now has offices overseas in London, Paris, Ireland, Bonn, and Johannesburg. Mr. Bonner is also the creator of the Daily Reckoning, a contrarian financial newsletter sent via e-mail (www.dailyreckoning.com). The newsletter now has more than 500,000 readers in the United States and Great Britain and is translated daily into German and French. It has received praise from mainstream publications, including Money.

    ADDISON WIGGIN is the Managing Editor for the Daily Reckoning. A contributor to Strategic Investment, Mr. Wiggin is also the author of the Daily Reckoning Weekend Edition (www.dailyreckoning.com), a weekly wrap-up of contrarian investment analysis. Before joining the team, he served at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C., and earned his master’s in philosophy from St. John’s College in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

    Customer Reviews

    Boring with a capital Bby Anonymous

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    07/28/2004: A compendium of outdated daily reckoning and agora publishing articles that are outdated and only of historical value. Most of the rants are cute, so if you like some ironic comedy attached to your old financial rants, then great. It is completely void of any useful investing information. So it is a dust gatherer for sure. maybe I can sell it to some other sucker?

    Highly Recommended!by Anonymous

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    04/21/2004: This book is an intellectual tour de force. The breadth of the authors? accomplishment is impressive, drawing on sources from Emerson to Einstein to Freud to Adam Smith and more. Whether their analysis is correct, however, is highly debatable. One could build a small mountain out of books that have declared prematurely that the American economic miracle is over. This volume draws heavily on the Japanese model to predict continued economic doldrums in the U.S., and the comparison seems a poor fit. Its over-reliance on a continental historical perspective ? Americans are na?ve, overly optimistic fools whose prosperity is the result of dumb luck ? seems fairly dubious. None of that takes away from the authors? keen perspective. Right or wrong, they bring intellectual light to the question, `Just what is going on with the American economy?? Because of this volume?s range and insight, we very strongly recommends it, especially to those seeking historical and cross-cultural context for alternative views about the U.S. economy.


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