Last year around this time I wrote a note explaining how there are a bunch of famous financial prognosticators that make money shouting scary words that help them book speaking engagements, sell newsletters, that trick people into making terrible financial decisions. One of those people is Jim Rogers. Every year he makes the same catastrophic predictions, every year the financial media gleefully prints his warnings, and every year I have a client forward me one of these articles asking if we need to do something.
Since we’re now in 2023 I figured I’d update my annual Jim Roger’s Prediction List with this article from June 28th: 'You Should Be Extremely Worried': Jim Rogers Warns That The Next Bear Market Will Be The 'Worst In His Lifetime,' Suggests A Bigger Crash Than 2008. Here's What He Owns Now.
In case you don’t have last year’s email handy, here were some of the same articles going back to 2011.
2012: Jim Rogers: It’s Going To Get Really “Bad After The Next Election”
2013: Jim Rogers Warns: “Run for the Hills Now, I'm Doing It
2014: Jim Rogers Wants to Put All His Money Into North Korea
2016: $68 TRILLION “BIBLICAL CRASH” Dead Ahead? Jim Rogers Issues a DIRE WARNING
2017: THE BOTTOM LINE: Legendary investor Jim Rogers expects the worst crash in our lifetime
2018: Jim Rogers says the next bear market will be ‘the worst in our lifetime’
2021: Jim Rogers: Next bear market will be ‘the worst in my lifetime’ — here are 3 keys to survive it
As I mentioned last year, all the articles above refer to Jim Rogers as a “legendary investor.” So naturally, the 2023 article starts: "Stocks have climbed in 2023 after suffering through a bear market in 2022. But according to legendary investor Jim Rogers, the next downturn could be more painful."
All the articles make it feel like these are fresh warnings. All the articles infer Jim Rogers is a smart guy that is rarely wrong on such things. These misleading points are all intentional. The authors know they are going to get clicks by reinforcing investor fears and catering to their confirmation bias. Sure, some people may make some bad investment decisions as a result but that isn’t the author’s problem. As the disclaimer at the bottom states, they do not provide investment advice.
So, take this and other cataclysmic articles with a grain of salt. It is generally the optimists that make money investing, and the pessimists that make money selling books.
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