Sunday, December 21, 2008

Krugman explains the malaise in the economy/An important reason why REAL ASSETS tick

Paul Krugman, the 2008 Nobel Prize winner, wrote a very interesting and honest article published on Today this past weekend. He talked about the Wall Street using the recent $50 billion Madoff scandal as a good exposition of the incumbent problems in the global financial industry.

In the article, the notoriously-frank erudite made clear the degree of risk and corruption involved in the Wall Street - loss is incurred by investors even though financial managers keep their high fees. The only difference between Madoff and the rest of the fund managers was that the former philanthropist-cum-investor was not in such a formal arrangement.

Paul Krugman also talked about the corrupting effects of the attractive remuneration on the society, estimating $400 billion a year in waste, fraud, and abuse, not to mention that the brilliant minds in the society have been attracted in rent-seeking rather than creating wealth.

Krugman just uncovered one risk unbeknownst to many. The economic zeitgeist in the US can never be dwarfed in its effect on the global economy and the global financial industry is an outright reflection of the numerous risks involved in various financial instruments. The widespread consequences are yet to be fully discerned for governments to conclude the right fiscal policies that will lead to the end of the global economic meltdown.

It remains, after all these uncertainties involved in attractively-packaged investment vehicles, prime to invest your money in REAL PHYSICAL ASSETS that follow REAL ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES and give REAL SUSTAINABLE RETURNS.

We, at Assetton, specialize in safe alternative investments that won’t give you a headache whenever gloomy economic predictions are pronounced in the news. We offer avant-garde investment-grade wines from the chateaus of Bordeaux. Wine, one precious commodity that has always been a luxury item, snowballs in value in scarcity and offers the lowest risk possible. In fact, it has been historically established that the average annual return for those who invested in Bordeaux wines was between 7.5 and 9.5 per cent higher than would have been predicted by factors that account for risk.

The grim prospects in the next year call for alternative ways of investments. While many have lost faith in the financial markets, wine (especially the red Bordeaux) remains amazingly resilient to these effects. Assetton champions the fine wine’s attribute as an investment treasure and seeks to pursue widespread popularity of wine as an intelligent investment in these times.


Source:
Bloomberg
TODAYonline, 20-21 December 2008
University of Wollongong research
Yahoo! News