A new way to measure the bubble forming in stocks...
A new way to measure the bubble forming in stocks... Introducing the SIA 'Black Index'... A lesson I learned from Doug Casey... A story about the first real bear market I lived through...
I'm not making that up. That was the title of his November 1998 presentation at Blanchard's New Orleans Investment Conference. I've since come to take seriously Doug's uncanny ability to see accurately into the future of global financial and political trends.
The 1990s were a period of massive technological change. As a young man (I was 26 when I launched this business), I was familiar with many of the technologies reshaping the corporate and economic landscape. I'd built my first Ethernet ring with Internet protocol telephony at my friend Reed's house while I was still in high school. I'd read Microcosm 10 years earlier... I was familiar with Moore's Law... and I'd invested in Amazon shortly after its shares first went public in 1997.
I was convinced that Amazon and many companies like it were going to "pirate" the market share of far larger and more established businesses. People I knew from high school and college were heavily involved in some of these fields, mostly as engineers.
And so I wrote a big report about the changes I knew were occurring. Unlike most other analysts, I focused on both sides of the coin: the companies that would win market share, and the companies that would inevitably lose it. For example, we recommended buying software firm Adobe and selling short obsolete camera-film maker Kodak. We recommended selling AT&T (the old long-distance phone company) and buying JDS Uniphase, which was making the lasers used in telecom systems that were driving down the price of long-distance service to zero.
"Porter," I remember him telling me in an e-mail, "This market is being taken over by promoters. All they're trying to do is get the public to buy their worthless paper. This is all going to end horribly badly."
While I knew that most of the new technology stocks wouldn't succeed... I thought that using my knowledge and contacts – along with trailing-stop losses – we would be able to navigate around the pitfalls. (We did, by the way... Our average gains during 1999 were well in excess of 100%, beating even the Nasdaq's 85% rise that year.)
It never occurred to me back in 1999 that most of my subscribers wouldn't sell their stocks, no matter how diligently we updated our portfolio. I also didn't realize that individual investors, who were (and still are) my primary customers wouldn't sell stocks short. That left most of my subscribers dangerously exposed to tech stocks even after November 2000, by which point we'd closed essentially all of our long positions.
As Doug foresaw, the real problem wasn't what would happen to my portfolio, the real problem is what would happen to my customers. I believe this is true for almost all business owners. You should care about what's going on in the stock market, even if you're not investing in it, because it has a huge effect on consumer confidence, retail spending, and the U.S. economy.
In March 1999, Doug proposed a $10,000 wager on the Dow Jones Industrial Average – winner take all. If the Dow was higher 365 days later, Doug would pay $10,000. If the Dow was lower, you'd pay Doug $10,000. I didn't take the bet because I didn't have a firm opinion on the value of the entire Dow. I knew many Dow stocks were vulnerable to new competition, but others would likely do well by buying lots of these new, small tech firms.
But a young writer at another newsletter company did take Doug up on his bet. Unfortunately, the matter became somewhat unpleasant – the other young writer didn't know how to disagree with Doug about the stock market without being disagreeable. (Sadly, nothing has changed in this regard. He soon left the legitimate newsletter industry and set up one of the lowest-quality stock promotion businesses in America. Now he's disagreeable to everyone.)
It's not the same as 2000: Investors haven't crowded into dodgy stocks and bonds because of a tech mania. This time, the Federal Reserve is pushing investors. People know inflation is coming – sooner or later – and that bonds yielding less than 5% don't offer them any protection or upside. The result is... like a crowd stampeding at a European soccer match... investors have been forced into a corner without an exit.
I understand that it is impossible to time the market precisely. Doug – as brilliant a long-term forecaster as I've ever known – got the last big tech-bubble blowup wrong by about a week. I don't expect my timing will ever be that good. But I will be surprised if we don't see a major and painful break in stocks by the one-year anniversary of my first warnings.
Looking at what I consider the "Big 3" story stocks in the market right now – Tesla, Facebook, and Twitter – you can see that the last month has been rough. My bet is... these names are going to continue falling. And... at some point... after they're down 25% or so... the negative momentum could begin to influence other drastically overpriced stocks.

The Black Index consists of 25 individual stocks. What I want you to notice is that starting at the end of 2012, these stocks have gone straight up. That also happens to be the exact same time that the Japanese central bank joined with most all of the world's other major central banks in printing huge amounts of new reserves.

But if you're hesitant to put money into the market at record highs, there is a way for you to buy blue-chip stocks below the current market value. In fact, you can name the exact price you're willing to pay... And you get paid for that privilege.
It's a strategy Retirement Trader editor Dr. David "Doc" Eifrig discussed last night on his live training session – selling puts. He used this strategy to amass 166 winners out of 168 closed positions. Doc's performance since launching Retirement Trader in 2010 is truly the greatest performance I've seen in newsletter history.
Even better, he's managed to make his readers a fortune with little risk. We only sell put options on the world's best companies... So in the worst-case scenario, you end up owning shares in a business you're happy to own at a price you chose.
Of course, if things get really bad, we're prepared. In Doc's educational material on this strategy, he discusses what to do in that scenario.
And yours truly even made an appearance... But Doc didn't know I was coming... It took him totally by surprise.
But it was Doc who helped me learn the nuances of this strategy, and he's a much more experienced trader than I am... And that's why I wanted him to take the reins of his own service to employ this strategy. I obviously made the right decision. His track record speaks for itself.

"I also now understand Mr. Buffett's and Mr. Munger's big mistake when investing in commodities and how they violated the number one rule of never losing money! They failed in the ConocoPhillips purchase regarding the number one rule... miserably (that's a lifetime's worth of funds for most and then some!). I am a simple fisherman from Maine, but I read your stuff, Dan's, Doc's, and Dr. Sjuggerud's emphatically (I'm a good customer) and I have learned so much... thank you. My portfolio reflects your best and safest transactions and follows the #1 rule of not losing money (I attached a TradeStops account to everything).
"Anyway, I wanted you to know that I thought your book segment was well written, easy for a layperson (like myself) to understand... which is marvelous when currying a broad segment of readers, which is what one hopes the book will do. Well, you did it, so let's give Porter a 'YeeHaw'! I can't wait to read the entire book. I'm working like a dog to get through all Dan's recommended reading list as well as some of the others at Stansberry, so I will add yours when it is available. Thank you for all you do Porter and best of luck to you." – Paid-up subscriber Amanda Odlin
Regards,
Porter Stansberry
Baltimore, Maryland
March 28, 2014

The death of the American shopper...
In today's Digest Premium, we discuss the history behind one of the biggest economic trends today... Americans' shifting shopping habits and the downfall of traditional retail.
To subscribe to Digest Premium and receive a free hardback copy of Jim Rogers' latest book, click here.
The death of the American shopper...
Editor's note: Today's Digest Premium is from Stansberry's Investment Advisory lead analyst Bryan Beach, who has been studying retail trends and the rise of online shopping...

Maybe you remember... Probably about 20 years ago, somebody at a cocktail party told you about this new "Internet" thing. It sounded like a novelty, something to be marveled at. Then, about 15 years ago, you inserted an AOL disc into your computer and started using "e-mail" to keep up with your college roommate.
Then, 10 years ago something happened. You did something you never thought you'd do. You punched your credit card number into a website and ordered a book. Two days later, it's at your door! It was so easy. So the next year, you bought some more books. Then you bought a sweater... and then a leash for your dog. By 2013, you did almost all of your holiday shopping online. Why leave the house?
The thing is, we've seen this before. This isn't the first time a "novelty" took down a retail king.
In the 1940s, families would often dress up and ride the bus downtown for their retail fix. They might start out at Macy's, Montgomery Ward, or some other local department store – like Miller & Rhoads in Richmond, Virginia, or Baltimore's Hochschild Kohn's.
Eventually, Dad would haul the gang back out to Main Street, and he'd end up at the hardware store. Then mom might window shop before taking the kids for a milkshake at Woolworth's. Throughout the first half of the 20th century, America's downtowns were the hub of American commerce.
For the first time, folks started heading outside of town to do their shopping. By 1956, an Austrian-born architect named Victor Greun got the idea to fully enclose a Minnesota shopping center. And the modern shopping mall was born.
Within 10 years, everyone did at least some of their shopping at malls. And by the late 1970s – just 20 years after Greun got the idea to enclose a shopping center – the suburban mall had usurped the retail throne. Downtown was dead.
For hard evidence, take a look at recent Black Friday sales. Traditional retailers like malls live for Black Friday – when they offer shoppers once-a-year savings the day after Thanksgiving. Online retailers have responded with Cyber Monday. This year, it wasn't a fair fight. Black Friday sales in 2013 declined for the first time since 2009, while 2013 online sales rose 21% over past years.
The numbers are shocking. And it's a trend that will only get more pronounced...
– Bryan Beach
The death of the American shopper...
In today's Digest Premium, we discuss the history behind one of the biggest economic trends today... Americans' shifting shopping habits and the downfall of traditional retail.
To continue reading, scroll down or click here.
Stansberry & Associates Top 10 Open Recommendations
(Top 10 highest-returning open positions across all S&A portfolios)
As of 03/27/2014
| Stock | Symbol | Buy Date | Return | Publication | Editor |
| Prestige Brands | PBH | 05/13/09 | 329.2% | Extreme Value | Ferris |
| Constellation Brands | STZ | 06/02/11 | 286.3% | Extreme Value | Ferris |
| Enterprise | EPD | 10/15/08 | 273.5% | The 12% Letter | Dyson |
| Ultra Health Care | RXL | 03/17/11 | 231.7% | True Wealth | Sjuggerud |
| Ultra Health Care | RXL | 01/04/12 | 189.7% | True Wealth Sys | Sjuggerud |
| Fluidigm | FLDM | 08/04/11 | 181.3% | Phase 1 | Curzio |
| Altria | MO | 11/19/08 | 178.4% | The 12% Letter | Dyson |
| Hershey | HSY | 12/06/07 | 175.4% | SIA | Stansberry |
| McDonald's | MCD | 11/28/06 | 172.8% | The 12% Letter | Dyson |
| Ultra Nasdaq Biotech | BIB | 12/05/12 | 171.8% | True Wealth Sys | Sjuggerud |
Please note: Securities appearing in the Top 10 are not necessarily recommended buys at current prices. The list reflects the best-performing positions currently in the model portfolio of any S&A publication. The buy date reflects when the editor recommended the investment in the listed publication, and the return shows its performance since that date. To learn if a security is still a recommended buy today, you must be a subscriber to that publication and refer to the most recent portfolio.
| Top 10 Totals |
| 2 | Extreme Value | Ferris |
| 3 | The 12% Letter | Dyson |
| 1 | True Wealth | Sjuggerud |
| 2 | True Wealth Sys | Sjuggerud |
| 1 | Phase 1 | Curzio |
| 1 | SIA | Stansberry |
Stansberry & Associates Hall of Fame
(Top 10 all-time, highest-returning closed positions across all S&A portfolios)
| Investment | Sym | Holding Period | Gain | Publication | Editor |
| Seabridge Gold | SA | 4 years, 73 days | 995% | Sjug Conf. | Sjuggerud |
| Rite Aid 8.5% bond | 4 years, 356 days | 773% | True Income | Williams | |
| ATAC Resources | ATC | 313 days | 597% | Phase 1 | Badiali |
| JDS Uniphase | JDSU | 1 year, 266 days | 592% | SIA | Stansberry |
| Silver Wheaton | SLW | 1 year, 185 days | 345% | Resource Rpt | Badiali |
| Jinshan Gold Mines | JIN | 290 days | 339% | Resource Rpt | Badiali |
| Medis Tech | MDTL | 4 years, 110 days | 333% | Diligence | Ferris |
| ID Biomedical | IDBE | 5 years, 38 days | 331% | Diligence | Lashmet |
| Northern Dynasty | NAK | 1 year, 343 days | 322% | Resource Rpt | Badiali |
| Texas Instr. | TXN | 270 days | 301% | SIA | Stansberry |
