jay21 Posted September 21, 2013 Share Posted September 21, 2013 http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323665504579032934293143524.html?mod=WSJ__MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsForth "The investment implications are, of course, own stock in the ground, own great resources, reserves of phosphorous, potash, oil, copper, tin, zinc—you name it. I'd be less enthusiastic about aluminum and iron ore just because there is so much. And I wouldn't own coal, and I wouldn't own tar sands. It's hugely expensive to build coal utilities, and the plants they have to build for tar sands are massive, and before they get their money back I suspect that the price of solar and wind will have come down so much. So I wouldn't use that, but I think oil, the metals and particularly the fertilizers, I would own—and the most important of all is food. The pressures on food are worse than anything else, and therefore, what is the solution? Very good farming, which can be done. The emphasis from an investor's point of view is on very good farmland. It's had a big run. You can never afford to ignore price and value, but from time to time you can get good investments in farmland, and if you're prepared to go abroad, you can do it today. I wouldn't be too risky. I would stay with distinctly stable countries—Australia, New Zealand, Uruguay, Brazil, Canada, of course, and the U.S. But I would look around, in what I call the nooks and crannies. And forestry is the same. Forestry is not a bad bargain, a little overpriced maybe, but it's in a world where everything is overpriced today, once again, courtesy of incredibly low interest rates that push people into investing. A wicked plot of the Federal Reserve." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JEast Posted September 23, 2013 Share Posted September 23, 2013 Just curious if the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change has any influence on his Malthusian views?? http://www.lse.ac.uk/GranthamInstitute/About/home.aspx Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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