America's Bubble Economy: Profit When it Pops

America's Bubble Economy: Profit When it Pops

by Cindy Spitzer (Author), David Wiedemer (Author), David Wiedemer (Author), Robert Wiedemer (Author), Eric Janszen (Author), Cindy Spitzer (Author)

Synopsis

America's Bubble Economy is the first book to focus on several simultaneous financial bubbles that are interacting to temporarily boost-and ultimately threaten-the United States and world economies. Filled with expert analysis and straight talk, this book will show you how to turn the coming economic transformation into a once-in-a-lifetime wealth-building opportunity.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 31 Oct 2006

ISBN 10: 047175367X
ISBN 13: 9780471753674

Media Reviews
WORRIED ABOUT THE HOUSING BUBBLE? You should be, but don't let it monopolize your agita. There are four other bubbles also deserving of attention, according to America's Bubble Economy: a stock-market bubble, a foreigner-supported-dollar bubble, a consumer-debt bubble and a U.S.-debt bubble. When the five collide in a bubblequake, the book's authors predict, the air will rush out of the pumped-up U.S. economy, deflating the average American's assets and standard of living. But not to panic. America's Bubble Economy has a subtitle: Profit When It Pops. Eric Janszen, one of its four authors, suggests keeping 10%-15% of your assets in gold, which he sees rising to a peak price of $2,500 to $3,000 an ounce. Janszen et al. also recommend eurobonds and euro-denominated exchange-traded funds, because most of Europe isn't as indebted as the U.S. and its main currency should outperform the dollar. A former venture capitalist and founder of the financial Website iTulip, Janszen says the U.S. is repeating errors of the Nixon era, including massive government deficits, under-funded entitlements and an unpopular war the government can't fund with higher taxes or special bonds. Throw in today's growing global demand for commodities, and ... all roads still lead to inflation, whether due to energy costs, unfunded deficits or dollar-currency risks, he says. Janszen, who was rightly skeptical of the Internet craze early-on, tells Barron's that the current stock-market bubble is a reflection of monetary inflation rather than future earnings. A more normal trendline, he says, would put the Dow at about half its present level, or 6,000. Now, that's something to worry about. -Susan Witty (Barron's, November 13, 2006) Chosen by Kiplinger's as one of the 30 Best Business Books of 2007 Paul Farrell, Senior Columnist at Dow Jones MarketWatch said on February 12, 2008, In short, America's Bubble Economy's prediction, though ignored, was accurate.
Author Bio
DAVID WIEDEMER, PhD, is a groundbreaking evolutionary economist who created the rigorous economic analysis on which this book is based. He received a PhD in economics from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Dr. Wiedemer has held senior management positions with several Washington, DC-area high technology companies and holds thirteen domestic and international patents on information technology. ROBERT A. WIEDEMER, brings to the team the real-world business knowledge and investment understanding that comes from founding a NASDAQ-listed information services company. He is currently President of a business valuation firm that is the primary business valuation advisor for the U.S. Small Business Administration's Small Business Investment Company division (the largest fund of venture capital funds in the world). CINDY SPITZER is an award-winning writer who has contributed to the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Newsweek, and many other publications and books, including the original Chicken Soup for the Soul. ERIC JANSZEN is one of the nation's leading financial bubble experts, having written extensively on the Internet bubble and developed the popular Web site, iTulip.com, which has been praised by the New York Times, BusinessWeek, National Public Radio, and CNBC. He has also been CEO of two venture-backed companies and managing director of Osborn Capital from 1998 to 2001. On his iTulip Web site, he called the top of the dot com bubble in March 2000 and recommended moving from cash to gold in 2001 when gold bottomed.