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Interview With Trader Vic
Written by Lara Crigger   
December 04, 2009 12:02 PM EST

 

When it comes to the 2010 outlook for commodities, who better to ask than commodities whiz Trader Vic?

Victor Sperandeo (also known as "Trader Vic") is one of the world's most outspoken commodities traders, with over 40 years of market experience. He has invested independently for the likes of George Soros, Leon Cooperman and BT Alex Brown, and has written a book, "Trader Vic on Commodities." Mr. Sperandeo also created the popular Diversified Trends Indicator, a long/short rules-based trading methodology based on a highly diversified basket of commodity and financial futures contracts.

At last month's "Inside Commodities" conference, HAI Associate Editor Lara Crigger caught up with Trader Vic between sessions to ask about his general outlook for commodities in 2010.

 

Lara Crigger, associate editor, HardAssetsInvestor.com (Crigger): Which commodities do you think are going to do well next year?

Victor Sperandeo, "Trader Vic" (Sperandeo): Well, I'm on record across the world as saying that gold is the best investment in the world for the next two to three years. It's fundamentally obvious, but when you're printing huge amounts of paper vs. something that is considered money, the paper will depreciate and the hard assets will go up. So gold and silver will do well—silver a little less so—but gold certainly.

Even when it was about $830-$850/oz, I basically said, "I don't see any scenario where it can come down." But I wouldn't say that it can't correct at any given moment. When the Fed decides to raise interest rates, at that point, gold will sell off. It will be a steep correction.

But it's also a buying opportunity, because if they raise rates, it would only be to try to stabilize the dollar. But it wouldn't affect the kinds of huge deficits and the printing of money that's going on for the next 10 years. It's unsustainable. So gold, that's my most favorite, if you will.

Crigger: What about the idea that gold's starting to move into bubble territory?

Sperandeo: I don't agree. If you go back to its lows, and you compound where it is today, it's about 6.5 percent compounded. That isn't a bubble. You know, when oil went from $10 to $150 in 10 years, that was more froth.

Crigger: You just mentioned that you thought silver would rise "a little less so" than gold. But many analysts have suggested that silver actually has better long-term prospects than gold.

Sperandeo: Possibly, except that gold has been universally and historically seen as money. It is the preference to silver. I'm not saying that you shouldn't own silver. I'm only saying that gold is the preferred item. There is an industrial use for gold, yes, and in jewelry, but it's more used as money. Silver has several other industrial uses.

Crigger: What's your outlook for some of the other precious metals, like platinum or palladium?

Sperandeo: I like those two. They've obviously done well. But they are more connected to economic circumstances. So as you get more and more problems from these economic circumstances that come about because of the huge deficits and inflationary times, they will run into more resistance.

So when I say I think gold's the best investment in the world for the next two to three years, I'm trying to take a lot into account. Because you may not see me again for awhile, so I can't correct myself.



 

 
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Comments (3)

 Monday, 07 December 2009 21:27 EST - Posted by re

 
The article doesn't say anything.

 Tuesday, 08 December 2009 0:45 EST - Posted by chumbawombo

 
re, you just don't get it do you?

 Wednesday, 09 December 2009 16:17 EST - Posted by i. b. wright

 
monetary policy will determine what happens to gold over the next two years and it's not clear what's going to happen there, especially when you have to take into account m2.

but over the longer haul, like five or ten years, it's fiscal policy that matters because the deficits are huge and not going away and the fed will be stuck over a longer time frame printing money like it's going out of style, which the dollar will.



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