Financial Advisor

The Year of the Market Breakouts

Andrew Gordon Reporting: Delray Beach, FL.                           

"Breakout Markets" give you a great chance to make a bundle. And they’re coming your way.
These are markets that surge hard and fast. They go up a lot more than anybody expects. Along the way, many investors get out with modest gains of 20%, 30%, even 50%.
Making 50% in a matter of months is pretty good. But waiting a little longer and making 100% is much better. If there’s an easier way of doubling your money, I don’t know what it is. And today, I’m going to show you just how easy it is.
Many people are afraid of "Breakout Markets" because they eventually peter out and go down. They shouldn’t be.
In a report I’ve just written, I’ve dispelled the following myths...
  • It’s impossible to identify these markets early enough to make serious money.
  • Only “insiders” or professional investors with "connections" know where to look for them.
  • Timing when to get in and when to get out is just too difficult to pull off.
None of these things are true.
As a matter of fact, it’s easy to recognize "Breakout Markets" in plenty of time to jump on board and made HUGE GAINS.
And I’m going to show you exactly how to know when to get out. Not only that, you can exit these investments in such a way as to virtually guarantee that you won’t have a loss. 

So where’s the risk?
The risk is not knowing what to do... getting in too late... and getting out too late. But, as I’ve said, all those things are avoidable.

Breakout Mania

Breakout Markets begin under the radar. And prices start to go up for sound supply-and-demand reasons. Then people begin getting enthusiastic – and before long, "Breakout Mania" sets in.
You’ve heard of the tulip mania in the 1600s. That’s one of the oldest examples of a rising market gone berserk. But have you heard of the nutmeg mania?
Back in the 1600s, nutmeg was the miracle drug. It could cure anything from tuberculosis to insomnia. Or so it was thought. Nutmeg came from the "Spice Islands," now part of Indonesia. More than half the ships that took the treacherous journey to the Spice Islands – halfway around the world from England and the Netherlands (the two countries that traded the spice) – never made it back. Yet sailors begged and clawed to join those expeditions. Just half a pound of nutmeg could buy them an expensive house in the city or a hundred acres of farmland.
But here’s what history has taught us about manias: They come and they go. And you can get rich in the coming. But in the going, you can lose everything. However, as I’ve said before, that’s only if you don’t know what you’re doing.
That’s not going to be the case here. I’m going to show you how to make a great deal of money without risking a loss.
But before I do, I want to show you how easy it was to make money in the last three "Breakout Markets."


This is the oil market. The blue stripes represent getting in at 20% and exiting with a 100% gain.
Here’s another breakout market. This one is China...



 Again, the blue stripes represent getting in at 20% and exiting with a 100% gain.
Now I’m going to show you one more example...


 his shows the U.S. real estate market with the same entry and exit points: getting in at 20% and getting out when the market has doubled.

The Year of the “Market Breakouts”

"Market Breakouts" will begin in Asia where economies are recovering much faster than anywhere else. And Asian central bankers already see them coming.
Hong Kong’s central banker, Norman Chan, gave the San Francisco Fed’s President Janet Yellen an earful last month during her visit there... "We have seen a very massive inflow of funds that is explainable by the very low global interest rates and coupled with this huge amount of quantitative easing," Chan said.
"This question of... asset bubbles forming is a big challenge for us," he said to Yellen.
And Former U.S. Treasury Undersecretary Timothy Adams said that his biggest concern is that "we are simply creating new bubbles... as capital sloshes around the global markets."
In a 2002 report on these markets, the authors (six of them) said that "breakout markets" start with "a decision of a central bank to increase lending or some other similar event. The expansion of credit comes along with an increase in prices...."
The Fed is guilty on both counts: expanding credit and lending more. And so are the central banks in China and most of Europe.
We’re in classic “Market Breakout” territory. 

How to Invest

In the next week issue , I’ll show you three ways to take advantage of these runaway markets with very little risk. And, apart from Asia, I’ll let you in on the most likely places where “Market Breakouts” will take place in 2010 – giving you multiple chances to double your profits.
Invest Safely,

Andrew Gordon

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