Mike Stathis predicted the 2008 financial crisis with more accuracy than anyone in the world. And his two books which predicted the collapse were released in late-2006 and early-2007, enabling those who followed the analysis and advice provided in these books to make a fortune. The reader can examine Mr. Stathis' unmatched track record of predicting the 2008 financial crisis and enabling investors to capture life-changing profits by checking here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. Therefore, Mike Stathis is the person best positioned to understand to what extent we face another financial crisis. Yet, Stathis was banned by all media from day one. In contrast, the media has been featuring con artists, broken clock contrarian indi......
The media has a special club, similar to boards of directors who serve on each other’s companies. You scratch my back I’ll scratch yours. Oprah had you on her show? Oh well then FOX wants you on and so does ABC, NBC, CNBC and even PBS. And we want to have you on our radio shows too. Forbes says you are an expert so we will call you an expert too. Of course, many of these so-called “experts” are columnists for Forbes and other mainstream media publications, or hack sites connected to Jim Cramer such as thestreet.com and its affiliate, realmoney.com.
Some readers may need to read a few previous articles I've written about Chris Martenson in order to put everything into context. However, for those who are not familiar with Mr. Martenson, I'll provide a brief rundown before proceeding to discuss the focus of this article. I've discussed Chris Martenson several times over the years because I believe he's engaging in less than honest business practices for the purpose of selling snake oil. In short, Martenson is someone the public should be warned about because he's selling fear and disinformation while marketing himself as a credible source of insight. Let me be clear. Chris Martenson is by no means credible. If Martenson kept to himself and only posted his nonsense on his huckster-themed "Peak Prosperity" website, hi...
Those who are unfamiliar with me can find out more about my credentials, my background, as well as my investment research track record here, here, and here. Examine Mike Stathis' unmatched track record of predicting the 2008 financial crisis, enabling investors to capture life-changing profits by checking here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Today, I'm going to continue where I left off from a previous article by exposing the fake investment guru who uses the pseudonym, Tom Nash. See Exposing YouTube Fake Investment Gurus Series: Introduction to Tom Nash In the future...
Continuing from Part 1 Why I Became Cautious on Gold Over the past couple of years as gold pricing soared, I began turning much more cautious as I recognized the increasing wave of manipulation that was building. This type of manipulation in gold pricing is not something you are likely to hear about other than the times I have discussed it. In fact, when the topic of gold manipulation arises, gold bugs and other charlatans speak of manipulation by Wall Street and central banks. This is just one excuse they make when gold pricing stalls or sells off. What they fail to recognize is that the manipulation of gold pricing by central banks (notably the Federal Reserve and Bank of England) occurs so regularly that it has become an accepted component of gold price volatility. T...
You may have read an article I wrote on Jim Cramer and the "bubble" network, CNBC. In this piece, I plan to really get into the details of how the media ser...
That's right folks. Once again, Mike Stathis nailed the market selloff before it began, helping to position his clients in cash.
You probably don't remember James Altucher's days when he was rubbing shoulders with Jim Cramer at his copywriting sweat shop, The Street. You remember The Street don't you? Cramer uses his slot on scam network CNBC to promote this boiler room...
Those who are unfamiliar with me can find out more about my credentials, my background, as well as my investment research track record here, here, and here. Examine Mike Stathis' unmatched track record of predicting the 2008 financial crisis, enabling investors to capture life-changing profits by checking here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- December 11, 2008 Rick Newman, Yahoo Finance The following email was in response to an email I received which was in response to my first email, in which I brought up having been black balled by all media for no reason other than to p...
Make no mistake about it. Kevin O'Leary is a typical Jewish con artist and media whore who makes all of his money based on false perception compliments of his tribesmen in the media. Is that a fraudulent business model? I believe it is. In reality, O'Leary is a business and investment failure. But thanks to the Jewish media which has created this myth that he's some business and investment guru, he's a very wealthy man. Similar to all media celebrities, O'Leary has made all of his money by deception compliments of the criminally insane Jewish media. These media parasites have created a false narrative that O'Leary is some kind of business and investment guru so that people will line up to hear what he has to say. And he uses this large audience of sucke......
I always suspected something just wasn't right about Paul Craig Roberts. After all, he was inducted into the political environment under Reagan, as a junior Treasury staff member. Next, he was a former editor and columnist for the Wall Street Journal.
On Friday, IndyMac joined the long and growing list of bankrupt mortgage companies (Accredited Home Lenders, Novastar Financial, Fremont General and dozens of others) that have been taken down by what has already surpassed mortgage and bank losses of the Savings & Loan Crisis. This was all predicted by me and in fact, I recommended investors to SHORT these stocks in 2007. Check here to download Chapter 12 of Cashing in on the Real Estate Bubble. While Indy marks only the sixth bank failure since the official start of the banking-real estate avalanche in February 2007, you can bet this is only the beginning. The last wave of bank failures in the U.S. occurred during the recession of ’90-’91, when 502 banks failed in a 3-year period. Prior to that, more than 1,...
Meredith Whitney is back after nearly ten years of hiding from the public eye. Most of you probably don't know or even remember Whitney. She became one the financial media's so-called experts after making a basic prediction in October 2007 that Citigroup would need to cut its dividend. Her reasoning was based on the notion that the bank's profits would not be able to cover the dividend. Given that she was referring to the common stock, it's important to note that dividend cuts are quite common and do not necessarily point to deep issues within the firm. At the time Whitney was working as a banking analyst for Oppenheimer. From this very basic prediction by Whitney, the media later credited her as having predicted the collapse of the banks during t......
Bank of America’s buyout of Merrill Lynch seemed laughable to me - that is until I realized the full picture. With a $50 billion all-stock deal valued at $29 per share, at first glance it might appear that Bank of America doesn’t stand to lose much considering its stock is at least 50% overvalued by my analysis.
By refusing to take appropriate measures and work with other federal agencies to shut down the cryptocurrency industry, the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) has helped this criminal industry become more mainstream. Therefore, the SEC has been partly responsible for the most blatant cryptocurrency scams that continue to this day. First and foremost, the SEC needs to be reminded that cryptocurrencies are in fact nothing more than digital scams hiding under the guise of "innovative technology." Let’s not forget that the so-called "innovative technology" linked to cryptocurrencies refers only to blockchain technology. Cryptocurrencies utilize blockchain technology, but there's no real innovation from bitcoin or any other cryptocurrencies. The only innovation that has...
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Recently the financial media has been issuing all kinds of statements about the emerging markets in order to create drama and panic. Does this behavior seem familiar? The financial media is always trying to create some kind of smoke and mirrors drama to get suckers hooked into their programming content so they can sell ads.
It’s a nice scare tactic to feed to Americans. How does Washington know they are too big to fail? How does Washington know their failure would be worse than the consequences of a government bailout? I can guarantee you that no one in Washington has an idea about what Fannie, Freddie and AIG had on their books. If the proper regulations had been in place – regulations that mandated transparency and disclose, we could make a fair assessment. Instead, Washington uses the scare tactic as a way to generate the biggest bailout in world history. Why would anyone believe Washington’s bogus excuse that these entities were too big to fail when they have been clueless for years?
Listen to the con man in the video below (who previously went by the fake name Bob English) as he pitches ridiculous disinformation and conspiracies in order to promote gold and scare people out of the stock market. This man was calling himself Bob English in the video which aired ten years ago (2012) when he was working for the disinformation scam blog, Zero Hedge. Many years later English would ditch this fake name and begin using his real name, Jared Blikre, once he landed a job at Yahoo Finance. If that sounds suspect to you, follow me as we go down the rabbit hole of media deception and fraud.
Maybe there's a good reason why CNBC has a show called Fast Money. If you follow the advice of these guys, your money is likely to evaporate very fast. Likewise, I'm beginning to see why Cramer's show is called Mad Money. You're likely to get mad if you follow his advice. Or maybe you have to be a mad man to watch it.