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Robert Kiyosaki Why the Rich Get Richer

Robert Kiyosaki, Why the Rich Get Richer

A Silver Lining for Nervous Investors

by Robert Kiyosaki

Good (1166 Ratings)
2.643224/5
Posted on Monday, August 20, 2007, 12:00AM

 

The subprime mess is widespread, and it seems to be getting worse. It's certainly worse if you're about to lose your home.

The stock market is schizoid -- up one day and down the next. If you're a day trader, this volatility is pure heaven; if you're getting ready to retire, it's likely to give you a heart attack.

Big Deal

As for commercial real estate, it's a great market. I just bought a 350-unit apartment house in Tulsa with an assumable loan at a 4.9 percent interest rate. Rents are low, the oil business is creating jobs, and demand for apartments is high.

As with any market, the real estate business is terrible for some people and couldn't be better for others (like me).

But as much as I love real estate, I believe the biggest opportunity today is in silver. I think this precious metal is about to become the most spectacular investment in recent history -- bigger than oil, even bigger than Google.

All That Glitters

Let me give you some reasons why:

• Silver is a consumable industrial commodity.

It's used in computers, cells phones, and electrical relays. This means that as countries like China, India, and Vietnam, and regions like Eastern Europe, become more modernized, the demand for silver will increase.

Silver is also applied in medicine. One little-known use is as a bactericide, a role silver has filled throughout history. Today, medical devices such as catheters and stethoscopes use silver, and every hospital in the western world uses silver sulfadiazine to prevent infections.

• Silver is scarcer than gold.

Gold is hoarded. It's estimated that 95 percent of all gold ever mined is still around. The exact opposite is true of silver: An estimated 95 percent of all silver ever mined has been consumed.

Forty-five percent of all silver mined is burned up in industrial uses. Jewelry accounts for 28 percent, and 20 percent has been consumed in photography. Only 5 percent is in coins.

• Silver supplies are down.

In 1900, it was estimated that the world had 12 billion ounces of silver. By 1990 it had dropped to 2.2 billion ounces. By 2007, the supply was down to 300 million ounces.

Some of the more pessimistic forecasts estimate that the world will be out of silver in about 10 years. This could be catastrophic to the world economy. In 10 years, silver might have as much of an impact on the world economy as $200-a-barrel oil.

A Safe Haven?

As a precious metal, silver is also money. And as the U.S. dollar drops, gold and silver are seen as a hedge against a loss of value. As more and more people wake up to the reality that their cash is trash, real estate is a gamble, and the stock market is too volatile, silver may be a great safe haven.

As I write, silver is approximately $13 an ounce. If industrial consumption continues and monetary panic sets in, who knows how high the price will go? Between 1979 and 1980, silver went to $48 an ounce. In today's dollars, that would be the same as $80 an ounce.

And recently, exchange traded funds in silver have been added as a way for investors to hold silver. The reason I find the silver ETF so intriguing is because an ETF represents real money -- not fake money like the U.S. dollar.

The ETF Solution

Prior to 1963, a U.S. dollar was real money that could conceivably be exchanged for silver. After 1963, it became a Federal Reserve note that was no longer backed by silver. A silver ETF is similar to old-time money, then, and as the U.S. dollar continues to drop in purchasing power these new ETFs may become the "new old money."

The significance of the new silver ETF is that it makes owning silver simple and convenient for the general public. Owning silver ETFs is easier than owning physical silver, which is heavy and requires security such as a safe. And owning silver ETFs is safer than buying a silver mining stock, which can be risky.

Silver ETFs are also pretty straightforward: If silver is $13 an ounce, you buy so many ounces at that price. If the price of silver goes up, you make money; if the price goes down, you lose money. The risk is minimized because you're buying physical silver -- you aren't buying a share of a silver company, which can go bust. As long as the ETF is honorable and protects your silver, your investment is secure. (A caveat: Silver ETFs haven't proven reliable yet, so use caution if you take this route.)

A Rich Find for Investors

My prediction is that the industrial demand for silver will continue to go up as the wider world becomes more modernized. At the same time, as the dollar drops in purchasing power, the average investor will wake up to the convenience of owning silver ETFs and start to buy them.

Consequently, the ETF side will dry up the silver supply for the industrial side. Someday in the near future, then -- maybe in two to five years from now -- these two forces will collide and the price of silver will go up faster than anything on the market today.

The Birth of a Silver Bug

I personally became interested in silver in 1957 as a 10-year-old boy, when I began collecting coins. I became a true silver bug when, in 1965, the federal government took silver coins out of circulation and reduced the silver content of a silver dollar from 90 percent to 40 percent. I immediately began getting bags of coins from my local bank and scratching through them looking for real silver coins.

Little did I know that I was simply behaving according to Gresham's Law, which states that good money goes into hiding when bad money enters the system. Today, I still have the silver coins I socked away as a kid.

While it's true that I could've profited more by putting my money into investments other than coins, my love of silver caused me to watch and understand the silver market. After five decades of doing so, I'm quite certain that silver will soon emerge as not just a good investment, but a spectacular one -- maybe even a once-in-a-lifetime investment. Of course, I've been saying that for 50 years now, so take my advice with a shot of tequila.

Buying In

Anyway, there are three ways to play silver:

Buy coins from a coin dealer

Buy shares in silver mining companies

Cautiously buy silver ETFs through your stockbroker

The web sites for Kitco and Gold & Silver Inc. provide more detailed information.

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425 Comments

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  • scott - Wednesday, July 23, 2008, 10:39AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    All you have to do is go back and look at what this guy says over a period of time, using his own language, to realize that he is a total fraud and liar, and he is actually dangerous and should not be allowed to post or speak in any public forum. In this column, Kiyosaki writes… “In August 2007 a new word surfaced in the world's vocabulary: subprime. That October, I appeared on a number of television shows and was asked when the market would turn and head back up. My reply was, "This is a bad one. The worst is yet to come." Many of the optimistic TV hosts got angry with me, asking me why I was so pessimistic. I told them, "The difference between an optimist and a pessimist is that a pessimist is a realist. I'm just being realistic."” Here’s what he said in a previous Yahoo! column "He then asked, "Are you looking for new investments?" A shocked look came over his face when I said, "I've been investing heavily in the stock market since August 2007. I've moved several million dollars into the market." "The stock market?" he stammered. "Stocks are crashing. Why are you in the stock market? Besides, I thought you were a real estate investor?"" --Robert Kiyosaki “Investing in Better Research” 1/17/2008 So in January he wanted to appear as the wise man buying low and selling high, and this January column features a whole dissertation on the “Rothschild formula for investing.” He wrote, “I wait until the stock market dips and then buy, which is what I'm currently doing.” So he was buying stocks HEAVILY (his word) since August 2007, but by October 2007 he had reversed field, and was telling “optimistic TV hosts” that the market was headed for a fall. What happened to the several million dollars he moved into the market since August? Who knows. What was he telling his readers in August 2007, when he was actually investing heavily in stocks (according to his January column)? “I believe the biggest opportunity today is in silver.” –Robert Kiyosaki “A Silver Lining For Investors.” Unreal. Yahoo! should boot this guy as a service to his readers. His appearance here reflects Yahoo!’s disdain for the investing public, and a serious lack of editing and writing talent. He is a complete and total liar and a despicable fraud who seeks to take advantage of people to sell his books to those stupid enough to believe him, and the only people who can believe him are the people who read ONE of his columns and have no idea about the lies that are revealed over time.

  • Srini Dodd - Sunday, April 13, 2008, 12:45PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I respect all scientific and peoplle serving the cause of humanity all over the world.But honesty towards humans has been a nightmare other than spreading feudal religious networks in poor countries.Spending billions on useless gatherings wasting precious man hours is not going to uplift any humanity.Nothing is superficious.when anything becomes scarce it would be eliminated from use.Please invest outside USA as $4 Trillions are with brokers and Government has 25% of that amount.Debt amounts to $16 trillions where as economy is $14 trillion.Chinese have been able to shed their blood and supply cheaper products.USA is not realising they are not worthy to have homes costing $300,000 each and that too 2 of them against each head count.5 million x $300,000 has already been crushed into ash with drawn from internation banks like UBS,DUTSCHE,HSBC,CITI and so on.National banks are conservative not to issue any credit to non citizens and non PR status people.WEF rankings of this year are totally fabricated by Harvard and Columbia university.They neither have solutions nor vision for growth of globe.Just aim for Business similar to any casino luring customers with half naked women dancing(Polygomy in campus aided which is similar technique). If someone can speak fluent english,he can not become a Master Of Business Administration.After all English is 4th largest spoken language.Mandarin,Spanish top the table.

  • Randy - Wednesday, March 5, 2008, 8:47AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    PAPER BURNS, SILVER PURIFIES! 3 months ago, when looking at the "red star" ratings, I saw a whole crapload of 1 and 2 star ratings; a bunch of "mean-spirted" critics. Hmmmm, I looked today and I see mostly 4 and 5 stars. I'm still waiting for the 1 stars to come out of the woodwork again. Well, I guess they will when: 1. Silver comes down from it's record yearly yeild of 52.26% (today)and 30 day yield of 16.86%(today). I got in Maples one week before RK posted this article. I'm up ONLY 48.15%!! And that's in 6 months. 2. All of the weak-spined, non-metal, non-RE investment critics recover from their AIG's and other plummeting "paper" companies.

  • Colin - Sunday, February 17, 2008, 3:05PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    Is there a Nickel ETF?

  • Philip F - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, 12:01AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I collect silver by means of bullions bars and rounds. Not only is it an investment you can hold in your hand and admire, it is something you can lock in your lock box at the bank and wait for prices to climb. In the not too distant past silver was $6.00/oz It was over $17.00/oz in January. I agree with this article. During recession times, do I want a piece of paper that has lost worth, or do I want a block of silver or gold? Silver is going to have it's time in the headlines soon.

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More from Robert Kiyosaki

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